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Morphology
Habit
- Banana is a tall herb two to six metres high with milky juice in all
the parts. It is monocarpic yet perennial, strongly tillering, monocotyledonous
plant.
Root
- Purely adventitious, very shallow.
Underground stem
- The underground stem is the real stem called corm. Its growth is sympodial.
The corm has short internodes.
- The bananas are clumped in habit, since suckers are produced from
the corm.
- The buds are borne on the middle or upper part of the parent corm.
The corm is covered with closely packed leaf scars.
- The corm's terminal growing point produces leaves in a spiral succession,
in the axil of each leaf a bud is present.
Aerial system
- It is the pseudostem made up of a number of leaf sheaths completely
encircling the axis of the stem.
- It is white in colour except where it emerges from the top. After
being exposed to sunlight, it becomes green.
Leaves
- The leaves are spirally arranged and consist of a sheath, a petiole
and a blade.
- The sheaths are nearly circular and tightly packed into non woody
pseudostem which is functioning as the trunk of the plant. They are
much longer than the blades.
- The petiole is rounded beneath and channeled above.
- In general, shape of the blade is blunt at the tip and tapered, rounded
or even auriculate at the base. It is thickest near the mid rid and
thinnest at the margins.
- The veins of the lamina are parallel with each other.
Inflorescence
- It is a terminal complex spike.
- Peduncle thick, glabrous or pubescent.
- Each spike in the inflorescence is subtended with big bracts.
- Bracts deciduous, crowded, spathaceous and spirally arranged. Bracts
are lanceolate or broadly ovate, dark purple or brownish purple outside
and pale puple or crimson inside.
Flowers
- Flowers are placed in the axils of the bracts, arranged biseriately
and commonly number about to 12 to 20 per node.
- Basal flowers behave as pistillate flowers while the terminal ones
as staminate. At the lower end, they form a bulbous male bud.
- The axis beyond the female phase is generally bare, but in some cultivars
flowers and bracts are retained.
- The intermediate flower clusters are of transitional stage structure
and are fuctionally male. Individual flowers are ebracteolate.
Perianth
- Strongly zygomorphic and is composed of two structures-a 5 number
compound tepal and a free tepal, totally six tepals (Similar for pistillate
and staminate flowers. In the 5 member, 3 outer major lobes + 2 minor
inner lobes).
- Pistillate flowers - larger in size and have well developed ovaries.
Stamens (5) reduced to staminodes. Ovary infereior and trilocular. Oblong
ovules are two or more rowed in each locule in axile placentation. Style
stiff and long, stigma club shaped and sticky.
- Staminate flowers - Stamens 5, long, filaments filiform, free anthers
two lobed, linear basifixed, fertile pollen absent. The sixth stamen
is also considered to be represented by free tepal of inner whorl-'tepalloid
stamen'.
Floral biology
- The female and male flowers open by 6.30 a.m. to 8.00 a.m.
- The female flowers bear a well developed ovary which much exceeds
the perianth in length and with a massive style, but their stamens are
reduced to staminodes.
- In certain wild species of bananas, fertile stamens are present in
the pistillate flower e.g. M. acuminata ssp banksii, M.
schizocarpa (Here they can be considered as perfect flowers or functionally
bisexual flowers).
- In male flowers, the ovary is abortive, the style and stigma are slender
and anthers are well developed.
Fruit development
- In edible bananas, the fruit develops by vegetative parthenocarpy
i.e. the ovary develops into a mass of edible pulp without the fertilization
and even without the stimulus of pollination. So the fruits are seedless.
- In the bunch, each cluster is called hand and the individual fruit
is called a finger.
- Fruit is a berry and has a leathery epicarp, slightly fibrous mesocarp,
and fleshy endocarp.
Seed
- Abortive ovules, not visible in edible banana.
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