Botanical name : Musa paradisiaca L. (Fruit variety)
Musa sapientum (Vegetable variety)
Common Name : Banana, Kela
Chromosome number : 2n = 3x = 33
Banana is one of the oldest fruits and second largest growing fruit crop in the world. It is also known as “Adams Fig “and “Apple of Paradise.”
Importance :
It is widely used as a fresh fruit.
The central core of the pseudostem is used as a vegetable.
The banana pseudostem is also used for manufacturing paper and boards.
3. IMPORTANCE
Botanical name : Musa paradisiaca L. (Fruit variety)
Musa sapientum (Vegetable variety)
Common Name : Banana, Kela
Chromosome number : 2n = 3x = 33
Banana is one of the oldest fruits and second largest growing fruit crop in the
world. It is also known as “Adams Fig “and “Apple of Paradise.”
Importance :
It is widely used as a fresh fruit.
The central core of the pseudostem is used as a vegetable.
The banana pseudostem is also used for manufacturing paper and boards.
4. INTRODUCTION
The genus Musa has about 50 species and this genus is divided into five
sections. The edible bananas of the world belong to the Emusa section. The five
sections are :
Emusa
Rhodochlamys
Callimusa
Australimusa
Incertae sedis
All banana land races are farmers selection from intra and interspecific
hybridization of two different species, Musa acuminata, donor of the A genome
and Musa balbisiana, donor of the B genome. Both of these species belongs to
the section Emusa.
5. MORPHOLOGY OF THE PLANT
Bananas can grow as tall as 19.7-23 ft (6-7 m), and typically have a crown of
leaves at the top of their greenish stem.
The banana stem is a pseudostem which is actually herbaceous and comprised
of the densely overlapping sheath.
Fibrous adventitious root system.
6. INFLORESCENCE
It is branched spadix.
The flowers are protected by large, brightly coloured, spirally arranged, boat
shaped bracts called spathes.
When the flowers open, the spathes roll back and finally fall off.
The flowers are polygamous ie., staminte flowers, pistillate flowers and
bisexual flowers are present in the same plant.
The male flowers lie within the upper bracts, the female flowers within the
lower bracts and the bisexual flowers within the middle bracts. Female flowers
are large in size and have well developed ovaries.
8. FLOWERS AND PERIANTH
Flowers :
Bracteate, ebracteolate, sessile, trimerous, unisexual or bisexual, when
unisexual, the flowers are monoecious.
The flowers are zygomorphic and epigynous.
Flowers are placed in the axils of the bracts, arranged biseriately and number
about 12 to 20 per node.
Perianth :
Tepals 6, arranged in two whorls of 3 each.
The three tepals of the outer whorl and the two lateral tepals of the inner whorl
are fused by valvate aestivation to form 5 toothed tube like structure.
The inner posterior tepal is alone free.
It is distinctly broad and membranous.
9. ANDROECIUM AND GYNOECIUM
Androecium :
•Stamens 6, in two whorls of 3 each, arranged opposite to the tepals.
•Only 5 stamens are fertile and the inner posterior stamen is either absent or
represented by a staminode.
•Anthers are dithecous and they dehisce by vertical slits.
•The filament is filiform and rudimentary ovary or pistillode is often present in
the male flower.
Gynoecium :
•Ovary is inferior, tricarpellary, syncarpous, trilocular, numerous ovules on axile
placentation.
•The style is simple and filiform.
•The stigma is three lobed.
12. FRUIT AND FLORAL FORMULA
Fruit :
The fruit is technically known as berry. It turns deep green to yellow red, and
may range from 6 to 30 cm length and 2 to 6 cm width.
The common cultivated types are generally seedless with just vestiges of
ovules visible as brown specks.
Cultivated bananas are parthenocarpic, which makes them sterile and unable
to produce viable seeds.
Floral formula
Male Flower : Br, Ebrl, %, , P (3+2) +1, A 3+2+1 staminode, G 0
Female Flower : Br, Ebrl, %, , P (3+2) +1, A 0, G (3)
Bisexual Flower : Br, Ebrl, %, , P (3+2) +1, A 3+2+1 staminode, G (3)
13. EMASCULATION AND CROSSING TECHNIQUES
Anthesis and Pollination :
The female and male flowers open by 6.30-8.00 a.m.
The ovaries contained in the first (female) flowers grow rapidly, developing
parthenocarpically (without pollination) into clusters of fruits called hands.
Occasionally, cross pollination with wild types will result in a number of seeds
in a normally seedless variety.
Emasculation and crossing techniques :
Undehisced anthers of male flowers are collected and twisted gently to force
them to dehisce.
Using a soft hairbrush, the pollen grains are taken out and smeared gently over
the stigmatic surface of the female flowers, which opened on the day of
pollination.
The pollinated flowers are to be covered with soft cloth bag.