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  2. Banana production in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banana_production_in_the...

    Commercial banana production in the United States is relatively limited in scale and economic impact. While Americans eat 26 pounds (12 kg) of bananas per person per year, the vast majority of the fruit is imported from other countries, chiefly Central and South America, where the US has previously occupied areas containing banana plantations, and controlled the importation of bananas via ...

  3. Banana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banana

    A banana is an elongated, edible fruit – botanically a berry [1] – produced by several kinds of large herbaceous flowering plants in the genus Musa. In some countries, cooking bananas are called plantains, distinguishing them from dessert bananas. The fruit is variable in size, color, and firmness, but is usually elongated and curved, with ...

  4. Banana plantation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banana_plantation

    Banana plantations, as well as growing the fruit, may also package, process, and ship their product directly from the plantation to worldwide markets.Depending on the scope of the operation, a plantation's size may vary from a small family farm operation to a corporate facility encompassing large tracts of land, multiple physical plants, and many employees.

  5. History of modern banana plantations in the Americas

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Modern_Banana...

    Although bananas have been planted for thousands of years, the development of an intercontinental trade in bananas had to wait for the convergence of three things: modern rapid shipping (steamships), refrigeration, and railroads. These three factors converged in the Caribbean in the 1870s, and would lead to the development of large-scale banana ...

  6. Dwarf Cavendish banana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dwarf_Cavendish_Banana

    Dwarf Cavendish banana. The Dwarf Cavendish banana is a widely grown and commercially important Cavendish cultivar. The name "Dwarf Cavendish" is in reference to the height of the pseudostem, not the fruit. [1] Young plants have maroon or purple blotches on their leaves but quickly lose them as they mature.

  7. Your Favorite Bananas Are Rapidly Going Extinct – but ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/favorite-bananas-rapidly-going...

    There's some hope yet. The bananas you enjoy in the morning, with your cereal, smoothies, with a scoop of peanut butter, in your banana bread, or just on their own, are facing extinction due to a ...

  8. List of banana cultivars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_banana_cultivars

    Left to right: plantains, Red, Latundan, and Cavendish bananas. The following is a list of banana cultivars and the groups into which they are classified. Almost all modern cultivated varieties (cultivars) of edible bananas and plantains are hybrids and polyploids of two wild, seeded banana species, Musa acuminata and Musa balbisiana.

  9. Cavendish banana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cavendish_banana

    Cavendish bananas are the fruits of one of a number of banana cultivars belonging to the Cavendish subgroup of the AAA banana cultivar group (triploid cultivars of Musa acuminata). The same term is also used to describe the plants on which the bananas grow. They include commercially important cultivars like ' Dwarf Cavendish ' (1888) and ...