Evergreen tree. In fact, all coniferous trees keep their leaves (which are in the form of needles) throughout the winter months, and all year around.
All trees will withstand winter, as they are many years old. Some trees shed their leaves in winter. They are deciduous. Trees that keep their leaves are called evergreen.
Deciduous
leaves
There are two major types of trees: Deciduous and evergreens. Evergreens are trees, which keep their leaves all year long. Pine, cedar, and other coniferous (producing cones) trees are evergreens with needles instead of leaves. They are the most common evergreens in Maryland. Deciduous trees lose their leaves during the fall and grow them back in the spring.
Autum. Sometimes even the beginning of Winter if the foliage is not complete.
hardwood trees lose their leaves
Deciduous trees lose their leaves in autumn. These trees shed their leaves as part of an adaptation to survive the colder temperatures and limited sunlight of the winter season.
Deciduous trees lose their leaves in autumn, facing winter with bare branches.
Deciduous trees lose their leaves in the autumn. Mostly these are broadleaf trees, but some conifers are also deciduous. In New Zealand, there are only a couple of species that mostly lose their leaves in the winter. The generalization that broadleaf trees lose their leaves in the winter is a northern hemisphere misbelief.
hardwood trees lose their leaves
deciduous trees
A Christmas tree is an evergreen that keeps its green needles all year round. A maple tree is deciduous. It loses its leaves in the autumn and is naked all winter, growing new leaves in the spring.