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Banana Identification Mystery Nanner? This is where you can get help to identify your banana plants. Upload some pics to your gallery and post a thread and let everyone know as much info that you have of the plant. |
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#1 (permalink) |
Location: Costa Rica
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Name: Jack
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![]() Hi all,
I recently moved to Costa Rica and bought a home that has 53 banana/plantain plants and was hoping to get information as to the varieties. Here are a few pictures of plants with newly emerging fingers, and some that are closer to the mature stage. Thanks in advance for any information you can give me. |
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#2 (permalink) |
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![]() Can try, but I do wanna caveat that I am not as experienced as some of the senior members. Hopefully one of them pops in to confirm or correct any errors I make.
Assuming they show in the same order for everyone: 1- (ABB Group, Pisang Awak Subgroup) Namwa: Based on the closed petiolar canals (the groove in the leaf stalk), along with purplish coloration and basal fusion of the pedicels (the stalks between the individual fruits and the rachis/stalk of the plant), reasonably confident that it's a Namwa. 2- (AAB Group, Silk Subgroup) Manzano/Apple/Silk Fig: The petiole color and canals being closed and the dingy white color of the male flowers are the identifiers I used. Note that this is a different variety from the Pome Subgroup "Apple" banana. 3- Too early for me to identify. 4- (ABB Group, Bluggoe Subgroup) Orinoco/Largo/Bluggoe: The unfused pedicel bases, angularity of the fruits, slight bends of the rachis (the stalk the fruit hands are attached to) after the fruits, and the spacing of the hands suggest it's an Orinoco. 5- Orinoco: See #4 above, plus the closed petiolar canals. 6- Orinoco: See #4 above. 7- (AAB Group, Pome Subgroup) Brazilian/Hawaiian Apple: Erect/U-shaped petiolar canal, white-pink female flower coloration, unfused pedicel bases, and the bract (the purple "petals") lifting with some rolling, all lead me to believe that it's a Pome Subgroup variety. The female flower coloration does have me second guessing which specific cultivar it is, but I'm reasonably sure it's a Pome of some sort. This isn't the same as the Silk Subgroup "Apple". Notes: I'm not making any distinctions as to cultivars with different heights in this analysis, since I don't have an idea of the scale of each of the plants. Orinoco varieties are quite widespread, and there's a lot of local names for the many different subcultivars (like Cali Gold) that I'm not gonna attempt to dissect.
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Aspiring botanist | Trash horticulturist I like to learn and teach about plants, but can't grow them well. Yet.
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#3 (permalink) | |
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Location: Florida & Greater Antilles
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![]() Quote:
It's common for some cooking bananas to be called Platano or Plantain. Popoulu subgroup is another example of this and is often called a Pacific Plantain or Pana Platano.
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#4 (permalink) | |
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![]() Quote:
That's a 5 gallon bucket in the bottom photo.
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#5 (permalink) |
Location: Costa Rica
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![]() Thank you very much! That was quite helpful, and most appreciated! I had the Bluggoe figured out correctly, and the others do make sense, especially the Manzano variety as that is a common plant down here.
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#6 (permalink) |
Location: Costa Rica
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![]() Beautiful rack. Those are exactly what I have there. I think I have three or four groupings of the Bluggoe's on the property. I have been making plantain chips out of them. Thanks for the information and photo's.
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#7 (permalink) |
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![]() If you like dessert bananas I'd recommend any variety in the Mysore subgroup.
It's often called a Guineo de Pina.
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#8 (permalink) |
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![]() Wow what a beautiful picture, not a variety I've ever seen for sale in the UK.
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