monkeys
No, domestic banana plant's fruit (bananas you eat) are sterile, the plant is propagated form cuttings.
A banana is the fruit of a plant.
yes their is in Argentina people eat them and blend them with potatoes it cost lots of money!
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.)
it is not very good for them and would cause them t get sick...but yes
Banana plant leaves have parallel venation.
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.
the difference is that banana plant is a dicotyledon while pineaple is a monocotyledon plant
A banana is not a tree, it is a large herbaceous plant and they do have large flowers. The female flowers develop into fruit
Gorillas primarily eat a plant-based diet consisting of fruits, leaves, stems, and shoots. They also consume roots, bark, and some insects. Gorillas are herbivores and spend most of their time foraging for food in their natural habitat.
Both. A banana (the yellow thing you peel and eat) is undoubtedly a fruit (containing the seeds of the plant, though since commercially grown banana plants are sterile, the seeds are reduced to little specks. However, the banana plant, though it is called a 'banana-tree' in popular usage, is technically regarded as a herbaceous plant (or 'herb'), not a tree, because the stem does not contain true woody tissue.
When a plant (i.e. banana), animal, or insect dies, "decomposers" (i.e. bacteria, fungi, worms) come along to eat it; breaking "the banana" down in to tiny pieces which is then used by the soil as nutrients.