View Full Version : quick question
Dick Justice
06-06-2005, 02:26 AM
Why do trees grow bananas? I know apple trees grow apples cause apples have seeds that get eaten and transported around by the feces of whatever ate it, spreading the apple tree population. But bananas don't have seeds, do they? Do I not know about them? I just don't understand how it aids the tree to grow bananas. And if there is no reason and it turns out to be just a nice little gift, it belongs with marijuana in the category of nature's nice little gifts.
Beeblebrox.420
06-06-2005, 02:33 AM
From here (http://yahooligans.yahoo.com/content/ask_earl/page?d=20030717):
A fruit is the ripened ovary of a plant, and it holds the plant's seeds. Fruits grow from a plant's flowers, and bananas do all of these things! Banana plants have flowering stems, and when the flowers mature, the ovaries inside them become bananas. In some types of banana, you can see very tiny seeds right in the center of the fruit. But many of the bananas you get at the grocery store are purposefully made to be seedless. Specialty stores sell banana seeds so you can grow your own plants. Banana plantations grow new plants by taking a fleshy bulb called a rhizome or a sucker off an old plant, and then planting the rhizome. I hope that clears everything up about this appealing fruit!
Stedric
06-06-2005, 02:38 AM
Because of genetic engineering, we may not be seeing bananas much longer.
Beeblebrox.420
06-06-2005, 02:39 AM
Because of genetic engineering, we may not be seeing bananas much longer.
WTF are you talking about?
RidingHigh
06-06-2005, 02:47 AM
yea wtf?
Stedric
06-06-2005, 02:47 AM
WTF are you talking about?
I would have explained more but I doubted anyone would care.
Have you seen how big our bananas are? That is not normal. Bananas have been genetically engineered so only the larger ones are reproduced for food. The upside is we have very large bananas. The downside? Very low gene pool diversity among bananas, so the second a disease comes along every banana on the planet is wiped out.
Resistance to disease depends almost entirely on genetic diversity in the genotype of a species.
Beeblebrox.420
06-06-2005, 02:58 AM
Um, no. Bananas and other food crops are larger and generally more productive than than their natural counterparts due to selective breeding, not genetic engineering. Genetic diversity is immaterial to produce crops, since their populations are almost entirely dependant upon human care for survival, anyway. Almost all domestic crops still have their wild precursors around, with some exceptions, so there is as yet little worry that a major crop failure will wipe out an entire species.
mono repin
06-06-2005, 03:13 AM
Hmm, interesting, but... there are lots of different types of bananas. You can get small ones, its just in the major grocery stores they carry primarily big ones. So a disease = 1+ years of bad crops, but its not like bananas will dissappear, they will simply take a while to bounce back.
Dick Justice
06-06-2005, 03:15 AM
Well I sure learned a lot about bananas here today, didn't you, boys and girls?
Thanks for the answer!
mono repin
06-06-2005, 03:16 AM
Well, basically what I just said is a paraphrased version of what beeblebrox. said, I missed his post.
MisstreeNny
06-06-2005, 03:17 AM
yea wtf?
You people make me laugh.
MisstreeNny
06-06-2005, 03:19 AM
I would have explained more but I doubted anyone would care.
Have you seen how big our bananas are? That is not normal. Bananas have been genetically engineered so only the larger ones are reproduced for food. The upside is we have very large bananas. The downside? Very low gene pool diversity among bananas, so the second a disease comes along every banana on the planet is wiped out.
Resistance to disease depends almost entirely on genetic diversity in the genotype of a species.
But my grandma had banna tress in her back yard that grew naturally, she didn't engineer them to be anything but what they were. :confused:
jenniferny2phx
06-06-2005, 04:10 AM
This is funny, a post about bananas, hahahahaha, you guys are the reason i like coming in here cause ilmao. I like bananas!!!
RaoulDuke45
06-06-2005, 05:35 AM
bananas used to have seed and they made it so they wouldn't have seed and they will die out in 2010, this info was from my history teacher, but i didnt listen in the class, and thats what i remembered most if it was probly bull shit, but it is proven that bananas will probly die out in the next 7-10 years
KronicKing
06-06-2005, 05:47 AM
bananas do have seeds in them,comerical bananas are bred geneticly not to have seeds,but any wild banana tree(yes they exist) will have little seeds in the fruit,i wonder'd about that too,so i googled bananas lol
RaoulDuke45
06-06-2005, 05:51 AM
thats what i was trying to say, i think
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