No. Spruce is an evergreen. ------ WRONG!!!!!!! Coniferous trees have small, waxy and usually narrow leaves (needles or flat scales). 'Coniferous' means that it is a cone-bearing tree. The most common conifers are spruces, pines and firs. Alternative names used for coniferous trees are evergreens, softwoods and (appropriately enough) conifers. However, the name evergreen is not really a good synonym. Laurel, acacia and eucalyptus are also evergreens, and although not deciduous, they are not cone-bearing trees (they also definitely have leaves rather than needles). Therefore spruce is not deciduous, it is coniferous
A spruce tree is a coniferous tree, while a maple tree is a deciduous tree. Coniferous trees typically bear needles or scales and have cones, while deciduous trees have broad leaves that fall off seasonally.
Non-deciduous or coniferous trees are needle or cone-bearing trees, some of these would be:RedwoodDouglas FirAll Spruce treesAll Cedar treesQueensland KauriRimuLarchSquoiaYewHemlockJust to name a few.
Softwoods come from trees like pine, spruce, cedar, and fir.
A conifer is typically an evergreen, it does not drop its' 'leaves' (needles or scales) as do deciduous trees. Blue Spruce, White Pine, and Douglas fir are examples of conifer trees. Think Christmas trees - they are conifers. A conifer is a cone bearing tree. Some conifers are deciduous for example the Larch.
Coniferous wood comes from cone-bearing trees (such as pine, spruce, and fir) and tends to be softer and more resinous, making it better suited for outdoor applications like decking or fencing. Deciduous wood comes from leaf-shedding trees (such as oak, maple, and birch) and is generally harder and more durable, making it ideal for furniture making or flooring.
deciduous
Spruce is an evergreen conifer.
A spruce is a evergreen and a maple is deciduous.
coniferous
Nope, it's an evergreen. :)
A spruce tree is a coniferous evergreen (pine needles and cones) and most maple trees are deciduous (leaves fall off).
Aspen and poplar forests or rather, deciduous forests. There's always a transition zone of spruce and deciduous (which include aspen and poplar trees) before going right to straight deciduous/hard-wood forests.
A spruce tree is a coniferous tree, while a maple tree is a deciduous tree. Coniferous trees typically bear needles or scales and have cones, while deciduous trees have broad leaves that fall off seasonally.
Diospyros kaki, the Chinese persimmon is deciduous. Diospyros virgineana the North American persimmon is deciduous. None of the persimmons are conifers.
To break this down to its most generic terms the answer is evergreen and deciduous. Meaning evergreen stays green all year long and a deciduous tree looses its leaves
Non-deciduous or coniferous trees are needle or cone-bearing trees, some of these would be:RedwoodDouglas FirAll Spruce treesAll Cedar treesQueensland KauriRimuLarchSquoiaYewHemlockJust to name a few.
Pine and spruce are both evergreens, so the answer would be "either one", or "neither". An evergreen forest isn't classified as having one type of tree. Some of them even contain deciduous trees.