A banana tree typically bears fruit once a year.
A banana tree typically bears fruit only once in its lifetime.
Generally, it takes a banana tree about 9 to 12 months to bear fruit. However, this timeline can vary depending on factors such as the banana variety, growing conditions, and care provided to the tree.
A banana is a fruit of a tree.
Bananas do not grow on tree's, the banana is the largest herbaceous flowering plant. The time between planting a banana and the harvest of bananas is from 9 to 12 months
A banana is an edible fruitA banana is a fruit, the seedpod of the Banana tree. The fruit occurs because the flower was pollinated.
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.
No, a banana tree can produce fruit multiple times throughout its lifetime.
The banana is the fruit of the banana tree of which there are several species.
A tree has to bloom before it can bear fruit.
No. If they did the banana tree in your yard would get fruit. Every so often they will, but for the most part they don't because of location and weather. So to say all banana trees bare fruit is wrong.
because trees have genders, if your tree is a male it will not bear fruit but if it is female it will bear.
Bananas do not grow on trees. The Banana plant is the largest herbacious flowering plant. The upright stem in known at the Pseudostem which produces a single bunch of bananas. After fruiting the psdeudostem dies.