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Species Bananas Discussions of all the different wild species of banana (non edible), an aspect of the hobby that deserves its own section. |
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11-19-2015, 04:48 PM | #21 (permalink) |
amatuer zone bender
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Re: Musa ingens in West Papua
Nature is awesome. I know it co evolved with m ingens, but i wonder what would happen if you inoculated some other musa species with the fungi?
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11-19-2015, 11:14 PM | #22 (permalink) |
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Re: Musa ingens in West Papua
Does anybody have a Musa Ingens pup they would trade for a Truly Tiny pup? I have a good spot picked out in my yard for one.
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11-20-2015, 09:04 AM | #23 (permalink) |
Hobby obsessor maximus
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Re: Musa ingens in West Papua
The fungus symbiosis is common with a lot of plants. There are wild terrestrial Orchids in my back yard that have little, or no chlorophyll and have to be infected by fungus as a seed to germinate and survive. They only send up above ground growth to flower, being underground the rest of the time.
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01-26-2016, 10:45 AM | #24 (permalink) |
Location: Tampa Area - Lutz/Land O'Lakes
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Re: Musa ingens in West Papua
Very Cool! I had been searching Google for BAnana Info and found the same picture from this website - It also shows someone eating a VERY Large banana that seems to be associated with that plant - Wawww 1 Pohon Pisang Bisa Berbobot 30kg-60kg Dan Tinggi Pohonnya Bisa Mencapai 20 Meter. - RameBanget
There's even photos of someone climbing one, so Gabe15, there's no perspective tricks :-) They are HUGE at the base. It's not in English, but if you use Chrome, just right click and Translate. There's also a Youtube Video at the bottom, but it's just a collection of images, including the one posted by the Harveyc
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Have: Mysore, Pisang Klotek, Rajapuri, a Pineapple flavored type (Pisang Raja?), Manzano, Veinte Cohol, Gros Michel, Gran Nain, Double Mahoi, Enano Gigante, Dwarf Cavendish, SDC, TT, SH3640, FHIA-18, a NOT FHIA-18 (?), FHIA 01, Pitogo, Blue Java, Dwarf Red, Dwarf Namwah, Tall Namwah, Orinoco (from 3 locations), Dwarf Orinoco, Cali Gold, Hua Moa, (Red?) Iholena, Dwarf Iholene, Dwarf Puerto Rican, Velutina and growing |
01-26-2016, 01:00 PM | #25 (permalink) |
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Re: Musa ingens in West Papua
I still cannot be sure that these aren't regular bananas being eaten by surviving Homo floresiensis.
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02-21-2016, 09:53 PM | #26 (permalink) | |
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Re: Musa ingens in West Papua
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