Banana plants have flowers, and wild bananas reproduce just like other flowering plants. So insects will go to the flower to collect the nectar, and the pollen will stick to them. The pollen will then drop off at another banana plant thus reproducing the banana plant.
Commercially cultivated bananas are sterile and are reproduced, or propagated, by suckers or by tissue culture.
See link below for more information.
it reproduce by suckers.you dump
By root
chuck it as the ground
Generally by off-shoots called suckers or "pups"
Bananas grow on trees, which "reproduce" through germination.
i dont think it can reproduce by itself but people can plant more
banana
natural resources are things that come naturally and reproduce and are renewable.
Bananas reproduce asexually primarily through a process called vegetative propagation, where new plants grow from the underground rhizomes or corms of the parent plant. These corms produce suckers, known as "pups," which can be separated and planted as new banana plants. This method allows for the rapid spread of banana plants and ensures that the new plants are genetically identical to the parent. As a result, this asexual reproduction is common in cultivated banana varieties, which often lack seeds.
fertilisation
Yes, examples of plants that reproduce by budding include yeast, Hydra, and some types of jellyfish. Budding is a form of asexual reproduction where a new organism develops from an outgrowth or bud on the parent organism.
Bananas are triploids, therefore are unable to reproduce, in this case seeds. Triploids mean that the fruit have 3sets of genes rather than 2