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Only from Fruits not from vegetable and also not from dry fruits

2006-09-13 19:16:36 · 36 answers · asked by Farooq N 1 in Food & Drink Vegetarian & Vegan

36 answers

Ananas

2006-09-13 19:19:28 · answer #1 · answered by cactusbed 3 · 1 0

There are only a few that have no seeds. The strawberry has the seeds on the outside of the fruit. There are grapes, bananas, oranges, lemons, limes, and watermelon. They have even come up with a seedless grapefruit.

2006-09-13 19:39:54 · answer #2 · answered by carmen d 6 · 1 0

I think there is no fruit that not contains a seed because the most important duty of fruit is to keep seed from the cold weather and other things that may make the seed unusable to make the new plant , so all of the fruits have seed(s) in them .

2006-09-13 19:25:24 · answer #3 · answered by Mohammad Amin Bagheri 2 · 1 0

Strawberries are supposed to be the only fruit with the seeds on the outside. Is that what you're getting at?

2006-09-13 19:24:18 · answer #4 · answered by Isthisnametaken2 6 · 1 0

A fruit which dont have seeds is banana ...as grapes also has seeds and seedless two varieties, strawberries also doesn t have seeds , saberjelli (Nashpati) doesnt have seeds.these are few fruits.

2006-09-13 19:41:35 · answer #5 · answered by hotgy4999 3 · 1 0

Seedless fruits are something of a paradox, as fruits are usually defined in a botanical sense as mature ovaries containing seeds. Among the widely grown seedless fruits are grapes, numerous Citrus fruits (oranges, lemons, limes, etc.), and bananas. Seedless watermelons have only recently been developed by a Japanese professor Kihara. Seedless fruits are commercially valuable as seeds are considered a nuisance by consumers and seedless fruits are easier to eat and thus preferred over otherwise similar seeded fruits. Most commercially produced seedless fruits have been developed from plants whose fruits normally contain numerous relatively large hard seeds that are distributed throughout the flesh of the fruit; there would be little commercial benefit to a seedless peach or apple. Similarly, fruits with small and unobtrusive seeds, such as strawberries and kiwi fruits, would be little improved by being seedless. And in species whose seed is the commercial or culinary product, such as sesame, most legumes, or grains of all kinds, seedless fruits would be considered a serious flaw.

Seedless fruits can develop in one of two ways: either the fruit develops without any fertilization (parthenocarpy), or pollination triggers fruit development but the ovules or embryos abort without producing mature seeds (stenospermocarpy). Seedless fruits of banana and watermelon are produced on triploid plants, whose three sets of chromosomes prevent meiosis from taking place and thus do not produce fertile gametes. Such plants can arise by spontaneous mutation or by hybridization between diploid and tetraploid individuals of the same or different species. Some species produce seedless fruit if not pollinated but seeded fruit if pollination occurs, e.g. pineapple and cucumber.

A common question is how, if they do not produce seeds, such plants can be propagated. In most cases the plants are propagated vegetatively from cuttings, by grafting, or in the case of bananas, from "pups" (offsets). In such cases the resulting plants are genetically identical clones. Oddly enough, seedless watermelons are grown from seeds. These seeds are produced by crossing diploid and tetraploid lines of watermelon, with the resulting seeds producing sterile triploid plants. Fruit development is triggered by pollination and these plants must be grown alongside a diploid strain to provide pollen.

One disadvantage of most seedless crops is that, as genetically identical clones, a pest or disease that can harm one individual can harm every individual of that clone. For example, the vast majority of commercially produced bananas come from a single clone, the 'Cavendish' cultivar, which is currently threatened worldwide by a newly discovered fungal disease to which it is highly susceptible.

2006-09-13 19:19:10 · answer #6 · answered by finalmoksha 3 · 4 0

Anyone think of the Navel orange. Strawberries have outside seeds and bananas have seeds too.
There is also a variety of seedless watermelon and seedless pink grapefruit.

2006-09-13 19:37:42 · answer #7 · answered by h2odog 3 · 1 0

in the journey that your fruit is a fleshy fruit, then however if this is one seeded, this is a drupe. Fleshy drupe: Peach, Mango, Apricot Fibrous drupe: Coconut, pili nut If this is a dry fruit, this is grain or caryopsis, like cashew, corn and rice. Achenes are one seeded too, like your sunflower seeds. Your samaras or keys is often one-seeded. communicate approximately maple. this is all. i did no longer stick to the guidelines yet desire I helped.

2016-12-15 07:49:13 · answer #8 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

some grapes don't....right?

Banana's have seeds... Or at least I thought they did. Is the tiny brown dots in the center of a banana when you take a bite of it, not seeds?

2006-09-13 19:19:08 · answer #9 · answered by Brooke~* 3 · 1 0

Banana.

2006-09-14 01:12:20 · answer #10 · answered by Hardrock 6 · 1 0

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