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, not necessarily, bananas can also be grown from their rootstocks.
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.
The same reason avacado's don't grow in Arizona, the wheather
Bananas are grown for food.
Wild ones grow from seeds. Cultivated ones grow from cuttings or from the suckers pulled off existing plants.
Bananas are grown year-round in the tropics.
the answer is grown
They technically do not "farm" bananas. Bananas grow on trees, and being that, they are not "farmed", they are more as grown. Most farmers do not farm bananas because they can't technically be "farmed".
Wild bananas do in fact have seeds. These seeds are just a bit smaller then a peanuts. Domestic bananas or the bananas you are use to buying in the stores are way smaller then peanuts. Normally a small black seed like a watermelon.
bananas are grown in Kenya by planting it watering then let it grow!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
it depends on how well they are grown
No, banana's are grown on trees.