Bananas do indeed have seeds - dozens of them. They appear as tiny black specks in the middle of the banana. This is what defines them as a fruit.
The seeds are sterile, meaning they won't produce a new banana plant. After many generations of breeding and improvement, they have been very nearly eliminated.
The way I understand it, it's because it simply won't work. Bananas have small things that look like seeds, and which perhaps were seeds in the remote past, but bananas are not capable of reproducing from those remnants of seeds.
NO when you dry a banana you can see the seeds and plant them.
Yes. All fruits have seeds.
Cultivated bananas, such as the common Cavendish variety, typically have very few, if any, seeds, as they are grown from clones and are seedless. In contrast, wild bananas contain numerous small seeds embedded in the fruit. These seeds are usually not consumed, as they are hard and unpalatable. Thus, while wild bananas can have many seeds, cultivated varieties are virtually seedless.
yes
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.
Wild Bananas have huge seeds in them - they are considered non edible. Commercial Bananas are either seedless or have small seeds in them and they are sterile (Cannot reproduce)
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 produce shoots from the root. Two shoots are generally allowed at any one time
All fruits, including bananas, produce seeds within their skin.
bananas have seeds. they're those small black/brown dots that you see along the core section of it.
Bananas are a fruit, there seeds are so small though, that some of them cant be seen by the human eye. there also so small, that there safe to eat (unlike apple seeds, watermelon seeds, avocado seeds, and more).