Yes, they will germinate if they are fully developed to about 6-8 millimeters long.
Bananas. Some plants shoot out roots to reproduce instead of bearing seeds.
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.
A banana is classified as an angiosperm because it is a flowering plant that produces fruits containing seeds. However, many cultivated varieties of bananas, particularly the popular Cavendish type, are seedless due to parthenocarpy, a process where the fruit develops without fertilization. These bananas are propagated asexually through vegetative means, such as planting rhizomes or suckers, which allows them to maintain their desirable traits without seeds. Thus, while bananas are angiosperms, the common cultivated varieties do not contain mature seeds.
The spreading out of seeds from the original plant is called dispersal.
Poppy seeds fly away
NO when you dry a banana you can see the seeds and plant them.
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.
No, domestic banana plant's fruit (bananas you eat) are sterile, the plant is propagated form cuttings.
Bananas. Some plants shoot out roots to reproduce instead of bearing seeds.
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, bananas are not a grain. They are classified as a fruit, specifically a berry, and come from the flowering plant genus Musa. Grains, on the other hand, are the seeds or fruits of cereal plants like wheat, rice, and corn. Thus, bananas and grains belong to different categories in the plant kingdom.
The quickest way I got money was by seeds, banana seeds to be honest. But a couple banana seeds from Vesta. Also buy alot of fertilizer. Plant the seeds in the biggest and most fertile field, the one in the back with the darkest soil. Plant the seeds and add fertilizer. ALWAYS FERTILIZE YOUR BANANAS!!!! As the trees grow buy a seedmaker. After you harvest your fruits put them into the seedmaker. If you have 'S' quality seeds them you can plant those can continue to grow perfect bananas. If you have 'A' quality make those seeds and plant and fertilize them. After you have a lot of 'S' quality seeds sell them to Van, but bargain the price with him. Do this over and over again :D
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.
Bananas do have seeds, however bananas from your regular grocery store will have very small soft seeds that are somewhat hard to identify. Wild bananas on the other hand have large hard seeds.