An evergreen tree retains its leaves throughout the winter season. Examples of evergreen trees include pine, spruce, and cedar.
Deciduous trees typically change color and drop their leaves in the fall, making them appear to lose their greenness. During the spring and summer, they will have green leaves, but they will eventually change colors and shed them as part of their natural cycle.
Maple, oak, birch, beech, and aspen are examples of deciduous trees. These types of trees shed their leaves annually in response to changes in temperature and daylight. Deciduous trees are commonly found in temperate regions around the world.
Tall trees with broad green leaves and small shrubs covering the ground.
These would be evergreen trees, hence the name "ever"green. Pines are the most common but there are many other "leafy" trees as well. Another way of saying it is they are coniferous. (its a more scientific way of saying it!)
This is called "marcescence," where leaves don't fall off the tree after they dry. It can happen due to various factors like genetics, weather conditions, or nutrient levels in the tree.
If you mean the green pigment in leaves of plants, it's called the chlorophyll. But if you're really referring to the green leaves of plant, then sorry, I don't know. The answer would still be green leaves, if you're looking for the name of the green leaves of plants.
It would be the trees leaves
because the geographical regions where the pine trees are growing would not allow them to have broad leaves and they have to conserve water also. In addition needle like leaves of the pine trees increase the photosynthetic surface area of these plants.
The closest thing you would be able to get would be trees.
They would become evergreens.
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.