No.
No. Wild and cultivated bananas have a basic haploid number of 11. The human haploid number is 23. In banana cultivation and breeding, people have developed triploids and tetraploids. Some scientists think that the banana's haploid number of 11 evolved from an earlier number of 8.
Bananas in the wild actually have lots of seeds throughout the flesh that are, maybe, pea-sized or pepper corn-sized. They are also short and fat and really don't look like cultivated bananas. The bananas we eat are cultivated from a species of wild banana to be larger and seedless, just like a seedless watermelon.
Ferns roughly account for 30% of the Polynesian flora. You will also find Polynesian vanilla, Mape which resembles the chestnut, wild banana trees (fe'i), noni or nono used for medicinal purposes, coconut trees and tamanu and temple flowers. 40% of plants are indigenous to French Polynesia.
some of the tulips are wild while some are not
There is no antonym for the noun 'wild flower'
The English term for musa balbisiana is wild banana. It is a species of wild banana native to Southeast Asia, known for its large and robust stature.
Wild Dreams of New Beginnings was created on 2006-10-10.
wild banana
No, dreams are not necessary. Many people never dream while others have very vivid, wild dreams. Many people will also keep dream journals of their dreams.
Bananas grow on trees, which "reproduce" through germination.
Banana peels.
Banana Rats are rats that eat wild growing banana skins, combined with their own pubis making it their most common snack to munch on, well besides pure whole hearted bananas
good...... let your imagination run wild
All bananas have seeds. The seeds from the fruit of wild banana trees are relatively large and hard, and those of cultivated bananas are soft and much smaller.
It is, almost all bananas come from this wild species
J.D., John Dorian
Well Only the Banana Rats eat bananas hence the name. If you Feed them to normal rats they will die but first chew off there nards.