No, domestic banana plant's fruit (bananas you eat) are sterile, the plant is propagated form cuttings.
Normal plants grow from seeds. But banana tree can't grow from seeds. They need a banana plant to grow. Plant such as- Fungi,Moss,Fern etc grow from spores. Spores blow in wind.
It has white flesh which is very sticky and in the center there are seeds, but you can't use these seeds to grow a banana tree.
Bananas don't technically grow on trees. They grow on herbs that are connected to the tree.
No, not necessarily, bananas can also be grown from their rootstocks.
Well, a banana does have seeds but they are not viable. When you eat a banana, you will notice some black spots in the centre, these are the seeds of the banana. A banana plant reproduces with it's stem and not it's seeds because they are too small.
A banana has seeds but you can't see them in the naked eye
The very small seeds are grown within the flesh of the banana
No, you cannot root a banana plant from a banana. You can buy a banana plant at some nurseries (depending on where you live) or, over the Internet. Once you have one banana plant you can yield the 'suckers' (side shoots from the original plant to yield more bananas.)
how do u grow banana trees? how do u grow banana trees?
Banana's do have seeds they are in the middle of the banana and they are mushy so you don't realise that there are seeds.
No. Banana plants (They are not called trees) do not grow from seeds. It is because they lost their ability to produce seeds a very very long time ago (It is not known if they ever produced seeds). So they are grown by a vegetative mode of propagation. It is something more like replacing the older plants. Banana plants grow from rhizomes or bulbs. In this way, the original plant is replaced (Banana is a perennial plant which replaces itself).
A banana grows on a plant called a banana tree