Yes, banana trees typically produce fruit multiple times throughout their lifetime.
Yes, banana trees typically produce fruit multiple times throughout their lifetime.
Yes, banana trees typically produce fruit multiple times throughout their lifespan.
Banana do not grow on trees. Their parent plants are herbs - plants with woody stems and are annuals or semi annuals. The root part of a banana plant is more or less permanent, and from which new stems rise and which then bear fruit.
Fruit are the swollen ovaries of fruit trees. The ovaries swell so that they can drop to the ground and produce more fruit trees. the trees grow and more fruit grows on the tree
An ostrich is a bird. A banana is a fruit. Need I say more?
Ok think about how a human grows it the same but it grows in the sticks and more info in Bitesize to help ok...
Pruning fruit trees helps the trees grow and produce more fruit. All fruit trees would benefit from some pruning with bypass pruners, but especially apple trees.
grape fruit grape fruit
Well... you could've asked more specific.. =P Bananas are neither, they are a fruit. But the answer of what you are trying to say is: Bananas are a flowering plant, often mistaken for trees.
The stuff that makes the banana Brown wants to make the fruit more brown but it fails
Yes, it is. Most people misunderstand what fruit is; apple, peach, banana, plum, pear, those are obvious fruit trees that everyone would recognize as such, but this is going by the purely horticultural definition of fruit. But more broadly, all trees that produce flowers are fruit-bearing trees, because the seed-containing ovaries are classed as fruit. So yes, the birch tree is a fruit-bearing tree. An interesting note about birch is that its fruit was used as a food source by the Incas.
Of course!! A banana is fruit ,so you can happily have your five a day without thinking your going to gain 2 pounds! If you are going to have a banana though, be careful, it has more sugar intake in it than any other fruit.