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2007-06-04 16:16:05 · 18 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

OK, I should have said "Bananas do not have seed for transplanting".

2007-06-04 16:50:36 · update #1

OK, I should have said "Bananas do not have seed for transplanting". As for being in this section.......I am going to assume God did the initial planting.

2007-06-04 16:54:43 · update #2

18 answers

After the tree dies, it just spawns another tree next to it... sort of like Water Lillies. When I was a kid, during the hols we would visit my Grandma, Grandma used to have Banana trees growing in her backyard.... it wasn't how they spawned that fascinated me... but there is a folklore that EVERY Banana Tree is haunted with a Spirit that lives within its hollowish trunk. She told us, if you tie a red string to its trunk, and waited till the witching hour ( apparently its 2am and not 12midnight to them old folks ), you could lure the spirit/demon out.....

We used to get scared Kaka-less when she told us them tales :)

Thanks for this question... brought back very fond memories of Gramps and the kids of the neighborhood :)

2007-06-04 16:25:04 · answer #1 · answered by Tiara 4 · 1 0

Bananas do have seeds. There just the same color as the banana and there very small, so you can't hardly see them. Let a banana turn brown and split it down the middle. You will be able to see the seeds. They'll turn black.

2007-06-04 16:42:36 · answer #2 · answered by S 4 · 0 1

A banana tree (although they are no longer quite wood) will basically produce fruit as quickly as. After it incredibly is fruited, it is going to finally die (even though it may proceed to be vegetative for a on an identical time as). i could attempt scaling down the triumphing "wood" (that have probable already fruited), and searching for suckers on the backside of the spent wood. each and each new shoot enhance will grow to be a clean banana plant which will bloom and fruit. and maybe verify with a close-by nursery approximately feeding? stable success!

2016-11-25 23:38:50 · answer #3 · answered by siwani 4 · 0 0

The seeds are much more readily visible in wild bananas. Domesticated bananas are the ones you are thinking of. See the YouTube clips of the banana argument and then the response to it showing wild bananas, and it may help you understand - since you seem to think bananas are a religious topic anyway.

2007-06-04 16:23:53 · answer #4 · answered by jamesfrankmcgrath 4 · 1 1

Dessert bananas (the kind you buy in a grocery store) have no seeds, because they have been specially bred and cultivated for centuries. They are a triploid species (having three sets of each chromosome), and are unable to reproduce without human transplantation.

Wild bananas do, in fact, have seeds. (picture at link below)

2007-06-04 16:24:03 · answer #5 · answered by marbledog 6 · 0 1

The Banana tree puts out 'suckers' or little trees when it gets older and gets ready to die. The new tree comes up right beside the older one. People can take the 'sucker' and transplant it.

2007-06-04 16:23:53 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

plants produce fruits not for your consumption but to reproduce. Bananas do have seeds. Plants are able to reproduce without the help of any human seed planter person.

“The only difference between speaking to a creationist and speaking to a wall is that a wall never interupts you when you're speaking.”

~ Ken Miller on creationists

2007-06-04 16:20:48 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 2 3

bananas do to have seeds, the seeds are those tiny black things throughout the center of the banana

2007-06-04 16:19:30 · answer #8 · answered by Sarah A 3 · 3 2

I had a banana plant (it's not a tree). They send out roots to start more plants.

2007-06-04 16:19:59 · answer #9 · answered by shermynewstart 7 · 1 2

What?! Bananas have seeds!
They are just extremely small!!

They are the tiny black things.

2007-06-04 16:19:12 · answer #10 · answered by DEPRESSED™ 5 · 2 2

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