Quote Originally Posted by Stedric
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.
MisstreeNny Reviewed by MisstreeNny on . quick question 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. Rating: 5