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Banana - Dwarf Cavendish.
Musa acuminata.

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Banana - Dwarf Cavendish. Musa acuminata. Six Weeks After Planting.
Photo Taken: April 26, 2015. Yarnell, Arizona. 4864 Feet Elevation.
Banana - Dwarf Cavendish. Musa acuminata.Banana - Dwarf Cavendish. Musa acuminata.

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Banana - Dwarf Cavendish.
Musa acuminata, Musaceae Family ( Musaceae ), Also Called: .

We wish to thank Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia for some of the information on this page. We share images and information with Wikipedia.

Musa acuminata is one of the earliest plants to be domesticated by humans for agriculture. They were first domesticated in Southeast Asia and surrounding areas (possibly New Guinea, eastern Indonesia, and the Philippines) at around 8000 B.C. It is the progenitor of modern edible bananas, along with Musa balbisiana.

It has been suggested that M. acuminata may have originally been domesticated for parts other than the fruit. Either for fiber, for construction materials, or for its edible male bud.

The Dwarf Cavendish Banana (Musa acuminata) is a dwarf variety of the Cavendish Banana, which is the most common yellow banana that you see in most grocery stores. The great thing about it being a dwarf is that it can be grown as a house plant!

We are featuring the Dwarf Cavendish Banana plants on our web page since they are grown by some gardeners in Arizona with much success, and we also have decided to also try growing bananas.


The Banana is really not a "tree" but a fast growing herbaceous perennial arising from an underground rhizome. Their fleshy stalks or pseudostems are formed by upright concentric layers of leaf sheaths making up the functional trunks. A true stem begins as an underground corm which grows upwards, pushing its way out through the center of the stalk sometime between 10 - 15 months after planting. It then produces a terminal inflorescence which later on bears fruit. Each stalk will produce one large flower cluster and then the stalk will die. New stalks will then grow from the underground rhizome. The main group of edible bananas are derived from Musa acuminata and Musa balbisiana. By the 1940's and 1950's, it became too difficult to use Linnean binomial names for all of the cultivated bananas and plantains. Therefore an alternate genome-based system for the nomenclature of the section Musa bananas was devised.

We are told that the first priority to consider when growing banana is to use the proper soil. It is very important to use a well draining soil mixture with 20% Perlite added to it, assuring that you have a good draining soil. Do not use heavy soils when growing banana such as potting soil, or soil from a yard. Plant the banana rhizome upright and be sure the roots are well covered and the rhizome has about 1/2" of the base covered with soil.

It is also very important to plant the banana so that it is higher than the surrounding area where you will place water. This is so that the roots do not become water logged and rot.

We are advised to water and fertilize banana at the same time using any type of balanced fertilizer to help grow banana. Bananas are heavy feeders so we are told that you fertilize very lightly each time that you water with the exception being that you do not fertilize if you are not seeing active growth. ( Balanced fertilizer means - a fertilizer that has three fairly equal numbers on the label ). After the initial watering we are told not to water again until the soil is dry to a 1/2" depth. Do not expect this to be a plant that you "water once a week". If you water once a week it is unlikely that you will have success growing this plant.

Banana grow best in bright light. At least 12 hours of bright light is ideal for most banana varieties.

Constant warmth is also very important - an ideal night temperature should be 67 F. The day temperatures should be in the 80s. Ideally the plants should have fresh circulating air.

Some gardeners in Arizona have success with this plant.


Quick Notes:

Height: Height 6 - 8 feet with less spread.

Flowers: A large, long-oval, tapering, purple-clad bud emerges from the banana inflorescence. As the bud opens, slim, nectar-rich, tubular, toothed, white flowers appear in double rows along the the floral stalk, each cluster is covered by a thick, waxy, bract, purple outside and deep red within. The flowers in the first 5 - 15 rows are female. As the rachis of the inflorescence continues to lengthen, sterile flowers with abortive male and female parts appear. They are followed by normal staminate flowers with abortive ovaries. The two latter flower types eventually drop off in most of the edible bananas.

Flowering Time: January - June.

Leaves: Large oblong or elliptic leaf blades are extensions of the sheaths of the pseudostem and are joined to them by fleshy, deeply grooved, short petioles. The leaves can become as much as 9 feet long and 2 feet wide. They may be entirely green, green with maroon splotches, or green on the upper side and red-purple beneath.

Fruit: Clusters of fruits, called hands. The fruit (technically a berry) turns from deep green to yellow or red, and may range from 2-1/2 to 12 inches in length and 3/4 to 2 inches in width. The flesh, ivory-white to yellow or salmon-yellow, may be firm, astringent, even gummy with latex when unripe, turning tender and slippery, or soft and mellow or rather dry and mealy or starchy when ripe. The flavor may be mild and sweet or subacid with a distinct apple tone. The common cultivated types are generally seedless with just vestiges of ovules visible as brown specks.


Found: Now, also considered native to the USA (FL). Also native to Baja Norte, & Baja California, in Mexico. Found in most tropical regions of the world.


Hardiness:
USDA Zone 9b: to -3.8 �C (25 �F)
USDA Zone 10a: to -1.1 �C (30 �F)
USDA Zone 10b: to 1.7 �C (35 �F)
USDA Zone 11: above 4.5 �C (40 �F)

Soil pH requirements:
5.6 to 6.0 (acidic)
6.1 to 6.5 (mildly acidic)
6.6 to 7.5 (neutral)
7.6 to 7.8 (mildly alkaline)
7.9 to 8.5 (alkaline)

Sun Exposure:
Full Sun

Elevation: Can be found from 0 - 3,937 Feet. Usually at low elevations.

Habitat: Found rarely in some Maricopa County gardens. Provide good draining soil. Do not use heavy soils, with clay.

Miscellaneous:


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