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No, the tree would not go dormant. What brings a maple tree out of dormancy is rising temperatures causing the staff to rise up the tree, bringing nutrients up and revitalizing dormant parts of the tree. The opposite would hold true for late summer or early fall, in addition to reduced sunlight hours and no need for leaves for photosynthesis any longer. That's why during longer summers in some regions in the northeast during that winter storm the trees still had their leaves unusually late into the fall because of unseasonably warm temperatures. It is also why when for some strange reason the temperature doesn't drop below 70 degrees F. for a week or more and that is highly unusual for that area, the trees begin budding in February, and then it gets cold again and they shut back down again.

2007-03-04 15:37:01 · answer #1 · answered by Professor Armitage 7 · 0 0

The maple tree would not like the climate in a tropical rain forest.
Being a deciduous tree, it would lose its leaves in the fall. It would not produce any syrup without the cold winter.

2007-03-04 09:03:46 · answer #2 · answered by science teacher 7 · 0 0

LOL bypass forward in case you desire to yet do you recognize that maximum maple syrup bought at the instant is man made? And that from one tree you may get adequate sap to boil right down to make a bottle or 2 of syrup? you're extra suited off commencing a employer to sell the mining rights on Mars.

2016-12-18 15:17:47 · answer #3 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

No, it would not. Trees and other plants go through a dormant cycle that is triggered by several factors such as temperature and sunlight hours. Time means nothing to a plant.

2007-03-04 09:06:54 · answer #4 · answered by afreshpath_admin 6 · 1 0

it might but maybee for a shorter period

2007-03-05 10:39:28 · answer #5 · answered by peter w 4 · 0 0

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