Deciduous in a sentence as an adjective

Not where I come from, a land of non-deciduous trees.

Loves the outdoors, though, I miss deciduous trees.

Tl;dr: deciduous trees send 'scissor cells' to lop off the leaves as winter arrives.

One example: Planting deciduous trees such that they shade the house from the worst of the sun in summer.

It reminds me of farmers planting deciduous trees near the house: shade in the summer, sun in the winter.

Around 100 years ago, the chestnut was the most common deciduous tree east of the Mississippi.

New Zealand doesn't have any deciduous trees I'm aware of... They are usually quite 'dark' though and make somewhat too much shade if not pruned.

Odd, but I've never seen the use of deciduous trees on the south side of a home mentioned as an energy regulating device.

There are plenty of non-native deciduous trees in Australian cities and suburbs too.

Most photosynthetic organisms on Earth are not deciduous trees and don't have seasonal cycles.

Personally, I'd like to see more marginal land being returned into proper deciduous forests.

But warnings about the heat and the allergies put me off, not to mention my worry that the Latinos might be hogging all the **** jobs and substandard housing for themselves, as they so often do. Don't ask me why Minnesota came to mind, maybe I just had a yearning for deciduous trees.

They are a big step up from needles, and deciduous trees pretty much pushed conifers out of every niche in the world except mountain slopes, where the cold plus conifer height advantage gave conifers a stronghold.

> deciduous tree leaves are mostly falling only in the Southern HemisphereHere in Florida, and due to the mild climate, certain species of Oaks will hold their leaves right up to the time they put out fresh buds in the spring.

Deciduous definitions

adjective

(of plants and shrubs) shedding foliage at the end of the growing season

adjective

(of teeth, antlers, etc.) being shed at the end of a period of growth; "deciduous teeth"