Maple trees adapt like all other deciduous plants. 1. the leaves start to shut down with the cold so they draw in the energy costly chlorophyll first, then the other pigments that contribute to photosynthesis that's why leaves turn colors in the fall. 2. apoptosis at the petiole, that means the cells that attach the leaf to the stem starts to die, this doesn't happen to all plants, oaks for instance keep their brown dead ugly leafs until the spring when they are pushed out. Water can freeze inside the tree but this is rare, wikipedia "frost flowers". For the most part everything just slows down: nutrient movement, stem growth, and root growth.
The Maple has several adaptations, like most trees it drop its leaves to survive the winter time. The roots of a Maple tree are strong and extensively branched out and the fruit of the maple tree is adapted to catch wind.
A maple trees habitat is a coniferous forest. It is a special type of tree, and a maple tree is one of them.
Maple Tree
Maple syrup is made from the sap of the Maple Tree.
the canadien national tree is the maple tree
Maple is not a fruit. Maple is a flavor based on the tree sap acquired from a Maple Tree
A maple tree is an angiosperm
Organisms like dandelion seeds, maple tree samaras, and fungal spores are commonly dispersed by the wind. These organisms have special adaptations, such as light weight and aerodynamic structures, that help them be carried over long distances by the wind.
The sugar maple is the state tree of Wisconsin.
There is such thing as a Maple tree. They give you Maple sap. 12 gallons of the sap can then be boiled to give you 1 gallon of Maple Syrup.
Yes, "Sugar Maple Tree" is a proper noun because it refers to a specific type of tree - the sugar maple tree. It is capitalized to indicate that it is a specific species of tree within the maple family.
No. Maple trees are not native to Australia.