Musa basjoo
Musa basjoo | |
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Species: | M. basjoo
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Musa basjoo |
Musa basjoo is a species belonging to the genus Musa also commonly known as the Japanese Fibre Banana,[1]. Although previously thought to have originated from the Ryukyu islands of Japan, from where it was first described in cultivation, it is now more likely to have originated from China, where it is also widely cultivated, with wild populations thought to exist in Sichuan province.[2] The plant is a herbaceous perennial with trunk-like pseudostems growing to around 2-2.5 m, with a crown of mid-green leaves growing up to 1.5 m long and 50 cm wide when mature. The species produces male and female flowers on the same inflorescence which may extend for over 1 m. Fruit formed is non-edible with sparse pulp and many seeds. [3]
Musa basjoo has been extensively cultivated outside its natural range not only into Japan but the UK, Northern Europe and parts of the USA and Canada. Although the pseudostem may only cope with a few degrees below freezing, the underground rhizome is considered frost hardy. If the pseudostem is killed and provided the rhizome is well mulched, the banana will resprout from the ground where it rapidly grows to full size in a season under optimal conditions.
In its home range in Japan, where it is thought to have been imported from China, the fibers of the plant are used to produce textiles known in Japanese as bashōfu (芭蕉布, lit. "banana cloth").
References
- ^ Prof. Snow Barlow (July 19, 2002). "Sorting Musa Names". Multilingual Multiscript Plant Name Database. University of Melbourne. Retrieved July 7, 2010.
- ^ Lui; et al. (2001). "Taxanomic notes on wild bananas (Musa) from China". Bot. Bull. Acad. Sin. 43: 77–81.
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