The so called hardwoods are generally deciduous trees there are some exceptions such as the live oaks.
Trees with needle like leaves are called hardwood or softwood.
That is trees with needle like leaves and whose seeds are covered in cones.
A few well known hardwood species are oak maple and cherry but many.
Rather the classification of trees into softwood and hardwood is premised on a biological distinction.
Let s look in more detail at the different types of coniferous leaves.
Note coniferous trees are classified under gymnosperms.
In most cases a softwood conifer completes a changeover of all its needles every two years.
They produce a fruit or nut and often go dormant in the winter.
Softwood softwoods are often derived from coniferous trees.
However not all conifers also known as softwoods remain green and with needles year round.
They all have leaves rather than needles.
Evergreen coniferous trees leaves are generally made up of needle like leaves that can be soft or hard.
Leaf structure with rare exceptions softwoods are conifers with needle like leaves that remain on the tree year round though they are gradually shed as they age.
Softwood tree information tells us that softwoods also called gymnosperms are needle bearing trees or conifers.
That is trees with needles and cones.
Softwood tree species including pines cedar and cypress are usually evergreens.
Conifers are commonly thought to be synonymous with evergreen trees which stay green through the year.
Softwoods are defined as conifers that is cone bearing like pine fir larch spruce etc.
The trees have broad leaves rather than needle like leaves.
America s forests contain hundreds of different hardwood tree species.
In fact about 40 percent of american trees are in the hardwood category.
Softwood comes from gymnosperm trees usually evergreen conifers like pine or spruce.
Some deciduous trees such as the larch and cypress are classified as softwood.
You can look at hard and soft to.
Softwood trees do not have broad leaves but rather have needle like leaves.
Evergreen coniferous tree leaves although they may not look like leaves coniferous evergreen trees such as pine spruce cedars and fir trees have leaves.
Softwood trees have medullary rays and tracheids and when observed under a microscope they do not appear to have pores like hardwoods.
Hardwood comes from angiosperm or flowering plants such as oak maple or walnut that are not monocots.
They are actually scientifically classed by how they fruit.
Please read on the anatomical and structural differences between gymnosperms and angiosperms here.