Form http://plantanswers.tamu.edu/fruit/figs.html:
It may be an environmental phenomenon or a problem with the variety. Often figs freeze to the ground in the winter. The regrowth is lush and vigorous and often the bush is growing too vegetatively to mature the fruit. Figs are also shallow rooted and easily stressed which can hinder ripening. Mulching and regular watering should help. Certain unadapted varieties will never mature the fruit regardless of the management program.
The coniferous tree with needles that turn yellow in the fall is the larch tree.
Honey locust leaves are normally green. However, they turn yellow for several reasons. One is that they are simply new leaves that have not yet gotten their green coloring. Two is that they turn yellow in fall, and are about to drop off the tree.
Yes, the paper birch leaves can turn orange and yellow in the autumn, adding a vibrant display of color to the landscape before they eventually fall off the tree.
Slows down and eventurally stops. That is why in the fall leaves turn yellow and other pretty shades and eventurally fall off the tree because they are not producing and sugar (glucose) for the tree so they are no longer needed
My parents have an apple tree in their yard. In autumn the leaves turn a bit yellow, but I wouldn't say they are pretty. It's usually a pale yellow with brown spotting. From there, they quickly turn completely brown, curl up, and fall.
No, There two different types of fruit, but from the same family.
Deciduous leaves turn red and yellow in the fall due to the breakdown of chlorophyll, which reveals other pigments present in the leaves such as carotenoids (yellow) and anthocyanins (red). As the days get shorter and temperatures drop, the tree stops producing chlorophyll, allowing these other pigments to show through.
They weren't adequately pollinated. If this is a common problem in your garden you can switch to a variety that is gynoecious (mostly female fruit).
To get money from a tree, just find one without fruit on it and shake it. Careful, you can also have a bee hive fall down, which in turn will get you stung by a bunch of bees!
Yes. Honey locust trees have small, pinnately compound leaflets that turn yellow in fall and drop to the ground. The 'stems' that the leaflets are on often stay on the tree longer though.
On average, around 20-30% of the leaves on a deciduous tree will turn yellow during the fall before eventually falling off. This color change is due to the breakdown of chlorophyll and the exposure of other pigments in the leaves.
No, only if it gets pollenated, then it will turn to fruit weeks or months later depending on the conditions.