Question:

Banana is

Updated On: Aug 22, 2023
  • berry
  • pome
  • pepo
  • lomentum
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The Correct Option is A

Approach Solution - 1

 Banana is a parthenocarpic berry . It is a fruit that is developed without fertilisation of the ovules and also without the need for pollination. The -fruit that is formed is without the  presence of viable seeds. Parthenocarpic berries are seedless and they do not rely on pollination. These fruits have a longer shelf life.

So, the correct answer is (A) berry

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Ans. Berries: A berry is a particular kind of fruit that grows from a single flower's ovary.

  • It has seeds and a pericarp.
  • Epicarp, the outside layer, mesocarp, and endocarp, the middle and interior layers, make up the pericarp.

Bananas: The monocotyledonous angiosperm family Musaceae of the genus Zingiberales includes bananas.

  • Fibre, vitamin C, vitamin B6, potassium, and magnesium are all abundant in bananas.
  • Berries are the classification for bananas.
  • Their mesocarp is plump, their endocarp is slender, and their epicarp resembles a peel.
  • They also come with several seeds.

One ovary, which develops into a single banana, is present in the banana blossom. The banana's flesh is delicious, it contains numerous little seeds, and its skin is slightly soft. Granted, you probably don't even feel or see the seeds when you eat a banana since they are so little. Bananas are therefore genuine berries, even if we'll readily concede that it's difficult to think of them as berries in the sense that most of us use the word.


 

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Concepts Used:

Morphology of Flowering Plants

Morphology in flowering plants tells us that every plant has two systems such as a root system and a shoot system. The root system digs deep into the ground and structures a system of its own. On the other hand, the shoot system is the one that is above ground level and includes various plant parts. 

Root System

The descending part of the plant grows under the soil roots. During the germination process, the radicle from the seed grows earthward and branches out. The branches along with the primary root are called the root system. Roots lack chlorophyll and therefore they are not green in color. Roots are positively geotropic and hydrotropic, that is, they grow downwards ground and water, and negatively phototropic, which is growing away from light.

There are three types of root systems found in plants are as follows:

  1. TapRoot System
  2. Fibrous Root System
  3. Adventitious Root System

Shoot System

The stem is also an essential element of the plant. It is the ascending portion of the plant axis that bears branches, flowers, leaves, and fruits, as well as aiding in water and mineral conduction. It is the plant's aerial portion, brought about from an embryo's plumule or germinating seeds. Young stems are ordinarily green, but they finally turn woody and brown.