Pineapple is classified as a bromeliad because it belongs to the family Bromeliaceae, which encompasses a diverse group of flowering plants known as bromeliads. This family is characterized by its unique rosette structure, specialized leaves, and often water-storing abilities. Pineapples specifically exhibit the typical features of bromeliads, such as their growth habit and adaptations to their native tropical environments. Additionally, like many bromeliads, they are adapted to thrive in conditions where water retention is crucial.
actually, it is a bromeliad.
The Pineapple.
The Pineapple
pineapple
A pineapple is part of the bromeliad family.
Bromeliad is a type of plant. Generally this plant is related to the pineapple, as can be seen if one looks at a picture of a Bromeliad. They generally grow in more tropical regions.
It isn't. It is a Bromeliad, or Bromeliaceae.
yes, its a bromeliad
No, the pineapple is a type of "Bromeliad" and is indigenous to South America, specifically the area between southern Brazil and Paraguay.
An enzyme referred to as Bromelain, coming from the type of plant a pineapple is(a Bromeliad plant).
I suspect you're thinking of bromelain.
Pineapples don't grow on trees. They grow as a big ground-hugging spiky plant like a bromeliad. They look like a big tuft of leaves with a pineapple in the middle sprouting another tuft of leaves, sort of like a giant orangey thistle. However, they aren't thistles, like artichokes. I think they actually are a kind of edible bromeliad.