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 Family : Musaceae
 Origin : south east Asia
 valued for their beautiful foliage or
coloured inflorescence and small
inedible fruits full of seeds
 typically suited for humid tropical climate
prevailing in Kerala
 Need only less management
 Can be grown with minimum inputs
…
…
Musaceae
 Musa
 Eumusa(2n=22)
 Australimusa(2n=20)
 Callimusa (2n=20)
 Rhodochlamys(2n=22)
 Incertaesedis (2n=14,18)
 Musella (2n=2x=18)
 Ensete (2n=2x=18)
Section -Rhodochlamys
 Most of the species in this section are
best known for their brightly colour
bracts on erect inflorescence
Musa velutina
Musa velutina
 ‘Pink velvet banana’ found growing wild in the
sub-tropical evergreen forests of Arunachal
Pradesh and Assam in India
 The name “velutina” was derived from the
hairy, velvety nature of the beautiful pink
skinned fruits
 On maturity the fruit peel splits and separates
into irregular strips from apex to base,
revealing a central mass of white flesh, filled
with black seeds
 Fruit splits on maturity.
Musa aurantiaca
Musa aurantiaca
 One of the most elegant members
of Rhodochlamys with bright orange colour buds
 Found mostly in higher altitudes regions of
Arunachal Pradesh in India
 Plant grows in clumps of 10-12 with 0.8-1 m
height
 Under undisturbed conditions it flowers freely
without following the seasonal behavior
 Four to five buds at one place give a false
appearance of forest flame.
Musa laterita
Musa laterita
 This species is native to North-East
India, Myanmar and Northern Thailand
 Its cultivation is common as an
ornamental plant worldwide
 The name “laterita” derives from the
colour of its bracts, which resemble the
brick-red tropical soil known as “laterite”.
Musa ornata
Musa ornata
 True form of this species only found in India
 During 19th century it reached to central and
south America where it became naturalized
 This species itself is not an especially variable
plant in itself but it hybridizes freely with other
species
 As a result there are number of hybrids
derived from this species in the tropical
regions with lots of variability
Musa siamensis
Musa siamensis
 Discovered from eastern Thailand in 2002
 This species is called ‘Thai Gold’ by Thai
nursery people ,̒ChekMeas’ in Cambodia
 Herb to 2.7m tall
 Leaves mid green, leaf blades - 1.2m in
length
 Inflorescence with pale creamy yellow -
lemon yellow bracts, younger bracts pale
yellow or very light green in some
specimens
 Flowers yellow
Musa rosea
Musa rosea
 Originates in Cambodia
 The inflorescence is short and erect with
red bracts
 This species has been recently
reclassified and synonymised with Musa
ancgorensis (Hakkinen, 2006).
Musa mannii
Musa mannii
 Is native of Assam in India
 Also called as ‘Assam Dwarf Banana’ or
‘Indian Dwarf Banana’
 The slender pseudo stems are about 60-80
cm in height with profuse suckering habit
 The leaves are green, with a narrow purple
boarder
 Inflorescence is studded with large pale
purplish bracts and shorter yellow male
flowers
Musa rubra
Musa rubra
 This species is known as ‘Red dwarf
banana’
 This beautiful dwarf species is native to
China, India, Burma and Thailand
 It has wide leaves, reddish stems and
stunning red flowers
 It is closely related to Musa laterita and
easily grown in tropical and warm
temperate regions.
Section Callimusa
 Plant bears upright flower stalk with
variously coloured buds, flowers along
with the seeded fruit
Musa Coccinea
Musa Coccinea
 It is also called as scarlet banana or red
ornamental banana or red tourch banana
 Plant bears inflorescence with more
rounded and clustered bracts of bright
orange to scarlet colour
 Plants are dwarf less than 4 feet in height
with profuse suckers
 This species is highly suitable for container
gardening as well as for screening purpose
as backdrop planting in the gardens.
Musa beccarii
Musa beccarii
 Small banana from Borneo
 Plant begins to flower when it is 1 to 1.5
m height
 This species bears a narrow, erect,
elliptical, bright scarlet bud, with green-
tipped bracts
Musa campestris
Musa campestris
 This species is called as candy cane
banana
 Native of Borneo and Malayan regions
 This species bears large purple flowers
followed by white coloured fruits which
are striped with pink and purple strains
looks like a candy cane
 Slender Pseudo stem with 1.5-2 m
height with profuse suckering habit.
Musa violascens
Musa violascens
 A fairly short ornamental species with
mauve coloured bud bracts often
confused with the species Musa ornate
 Distributed in Malayan regions
 Having slender pseudostem with 1-2m
height
Genera Ensete (2n=18, x=9)
 Ensete glaucum
 Ensete superbum (Rock banana)
 Ensete perrieri
 Ensete homblei
 Ensete ventricosum
 E. ventricosum Maurrelli (Abyssinian
banana)
Ensete glaucum Ensete superbum
Ensete perrieri Ensete homblei
E. ventricosum Maurrelli
Ensete ventricosum
Genera-Musella (2n=18, x=9)
CULTIVATION
 Climate
 Humid subtropical to semi-arid subtropics up
to 2500 m above mean sea level
 temperature - 15-35°C
 rainfall - 500-2000 mm/year
 Require full sunshine
Temperature and wind
 Temperature Requirement :
○ 26 – 28 0C - shoot growth
○ 29 – 30 0C - fruit growth
○ Growth is slowed down at 16 0C and stops at 10 0C
○ If temperature falls below 10 0C – chilling injury
 Wind speed above 25 mph and 45 mph
may cause the tall and short cultivars to
topple
Soil
 All kinds of soils having good drainage- In
sandy soils, plants grow faster
 pH - 6.5-7.5 is optimum
Propagation
 Musa and Musella- suckers
 Ensete -main pseudostem of bananas is
monocarpic (it dies after flowering) -next
oldest sucker grows to replace it
 Suckers or corms , seeds ,cut rhizomes
Planting
 Pot and Pit methods
 Pits- 60 cm3 - filled with a mixture of soil,
sand and farmyard manure -1:1:1
 Sucker or seedling is planted in the center
of pit
 Ornamental purpose bananas - 0.6-3m
apart
 Dwarf statured plant species can be grown
in containers
 Repotting - once in three years
Use of growth regulators
 Paclobutrazol 0.25 mg/plant (Gaspar et
al, 1999) at end of hardening stage reduce
the plant height two months after
application
 Ancymidol (ANC) or Paclobutrazol (PBZ)
in liquid culture media during multiplication
stage of bananas decreases the excessive
growth of stems and leaves
 Soil application of Paclobutrazol reduces
the plant height by 25% without any
adverse effect on the flowering
Interculturing
 Irrigation -1-1.5” water/week
 Desuckering
 Weed control
Flowering and fruiting
 Flowering in banana occurs after a
vegetative phase of leaf growth
 Shoot apical meristem differentiates to an
inflorescence
 Basal flowers – female
 Distal flowers – male
 Bracts subtend the flowers
 By the time male flowers on
inflorescence are shedding pollen ,
female flowers no longer receptive
 For seedset , synchronization of
flowering required
 Rarely, basal flowers are functionally
hermaphrodite and can be self pollinated
to produce viable seeds- Musa velutina ,
Ensete spp
Diseases
 Fusarium wilt
 Sigatoka leaf spot
 Bacterial wilt
 Bunchy top
 Mosaic virus
Pests
 Banana weevil- Carbaryl -0.1%
 Burrowing nematode (radophilus
similes)- Carbofuran 3G
 Root-knot nematode (meloidogyne
spp)
Ornamental musa

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Ornamental musa

  • 1.
  • 2.  Family : Musaceae  Origin : south east Asia  valued for their beautiful foliage or coloured inflorescence and small inedible fruits full of seeds  typically suited for humid tropical climate prevailing in Kerala  Need only less management  Can be grown with minimum inputs
  • 3.
  • 5.
  • 6.
  • 7.
  • 8. Musaceae  Musa  Eumusa(2n=22)  Australimusa(2n=20)  Callimusa (2n=20)  Rhodochlamys(2n=22)  Incertaesedis (2n=14,18)  Musella (2n=2x=18)  Ensete (2n=2x=18)
  • 9. Section -Rhodochlamys  Most of the species in this section are best known for their brightly colour bracts on erect inflorescence
  • 11. Musa velutina  ‘Pink velvet banana’ found growing wild in the sub-tropical evergreen forests of Arunachal Pradesh and Assam in India  The name “velutina” was derived from the hairy, velvety nature of the beautiful pink skinned fruits  On maturity the fruit peel splits and separates into irregular strips from apex to base, revealing a central mass of white flesh, filled with black seeds  Fruit splits on maturity.
  • 13. Musa aurantiaca  One of the most elegant members of Rhodochlamys with bright orange colour buds  Found mostly in higher altitudes regions of Arunachal Pradesh in India  Plant grows in clumps of 10-12 with 0.8-1 m height  Under undisturbed conditions it flowers freely without following the seasonal behavior  Four to five buds at one place give a false appearance of forest flame.
  • 15. Musa laterita  This species is native to North-East India, Myanmar and Northern Thailand  Its cultivation is common as an ornamental plant worldwide  The name “laterita” derives from the colour of its bracts, which resemble the brick-red tropical soil known as “laterite”.
  • 17. Musa ornata  True form of this species only found in India  During 19th century it reached to central and south America where it became naturalized  This species itself is not an especially variable plant in itself but it hybridizes freely with other species  As a result there are number of hybrids derived from this species in the tropical regions with lots of variability
  • 19. Musa siamensis  Discovered from eastern Thailand in 2002  This species is called ‘Thai Gold’ by Thai nursery people ,̒ChekMeas’ in Cambodia  Herb to 2.7m tall  Leaves mid green, leaf blades - 1.2m in length  Inflorescence with pale creamy yellow - lemon yellow bracts, younger bracts pale yellow or very light green in some specimens  Flowers yellow
  • 21. Musa rosea  Originates in Cambodia  The inflorescence is short and erect with red bracts  This species has been recently reclassified and synonymised with Musa ancgorensis (Hakkinen, 2006).
  • 23. Musa mannii  Is native of Assam in India  Also called as ‘Assam Dwarf Banana’ or ‘Indian Dwarf Banana’  The slender pseudo stems are about 60-80 cm in height with profuse suckering habit  The leaves are green, with a narrow purple boarder  Inflorescence is studded with large pale purplish bracts and shorter yellow male flowers
  • 25. Musa rubra  This species is known as ‘Red dwarf banana’  This beautiful dwarf species is native to China, India, Burma and Thailand  It has wide leaves, reddish stems and stunning red flowers  It is closely related to Musa laterita and easily grown in tropical and warm temperate regions.
  • 26. Section Callimusa  Plant bears upright flower stalk with variously coloured buds, flowers along with the seeded fruit
  • 28. Musa Coccinea  It is also called as scarlet banana or red ornamental banana or red tourch banana  Plant bears inflorescence with more rounded and clustered bracts of bright orange to scarlet colour  Plants are dwarf less than 4 feet in height with profuse suckers  This species is highly suitable for container gardening as well as for screening purpose as backdrop planting in the gardens.
  • 30. Musa beccarii  Small banana from Borneo  Plant begins to flower when it is 1 to 1.5 m height  This species bears a narrow, erect, elliptical, bright scarlet bud, with green- tipped bracts
  • 32. Musa campestris  This species is called as candy cane banana  Native of Borneo and Malayan regions  This species bears large purple flowers followed by white coloured fruits which are striped with pink and purple strains looks like a candy cane  Slender Pseudo stem with 1.5-2 m height with profuse suckering habit.
  • 34. Musa violascens  A fairly short ornamental species with mauve coloured bud bracts often confused with the species Musa ornate  Distributed in Malayan regions  Having slender pseudostem with 1-2m height
  • 35. Genera Ensete (2n=18, x=9)  Ensete glaucum  Ensete superbum (Rock banana)  Ensete perrieri  Ensete homblei  Ensete ventricosum  E. ventricosum Maurrelli (Abyssinian banana)
  • 40. CULTIVATION  Climate  Humid subtropical to semi-arid subtropics up to 2500 m above mean sea level  temperature - 15-35°C  rainfall - 500-2000 mm/year  Require full sunshine
  • 41. Temperature and wind  Temperature Requirement : ○ 26 – 28 0C - shoot growth ○ 29 – 30 0C - fruit growth ○ Growth is slowed down at 16 0C and stops at 10 0C ○ If temperature falls below 10 0C – chilling injury  Wind speed above 25 mph and 45 mph may cause the tall and short cultivars to topple
  • 42. Soil  All kinds of soils having good drainage- In sandy soils, plants grow faster  pH - 6.5-7.5 is optimum
  • 43. Propagation  Musa and Musella- suckers  Ensete -main pseudostem of bananas is monocarpic (it dies after flowering) -next oldest sucker grows to replace it  Suckers or corms , seeds ,cut rhizomes
  • 44. Planting  Pot and Pit methods  Pits- 60 cm3 - filled with a mixture of soil, sand and farmyard manure -1:1:1  Sucker or seedling is planted in the center of pit  Ornamental purpose bananas - 0.6-3m apart  Dwarf statured plant species can be grown in containers  Repotting - once in three years
  • 45. Use of growth regulators  Paclobutrazol 0.25 mg/plant (Gaspar et al, 1999) at end of hardening stage reduce the plant height two months after application  Ancymidol (ANC) or Paclobutrazol (PBZ) in liquid culture media during multiplication stage of bananas decreases the excessive growth of stems and leaves  Soil application of Paclobutrazol reduces the plant height by 25% without any adverse effect on the flowering
  • 46. Interculturing  Irrigation -1-1.5” water/week  Desuckering  Weed control
  • 47. Flowering and fruiting  Flowering in banana occurs after a vegetative phase of leaf growth  Shoot apical meristem differentiates to an inflorescence  Basal flowers – female  Distal flowers – male  Bracts subtend the flowers
  • 48.  By the time male flowers on inflorescence are shedding pollen , female flowers no longer receptive  For seedset , synchronization of flowering required  Rarely, basal flowers are functionally hermaphrodite and can be self pollinated to produce viable seeds- Musa velutina , Ensete spp
  • 49. Diseases  Fusarium wilt  Sigatoka leaf spot  Bacterial wilt  Bunchy top  Mosaic virus
  • 50. Pests  Banana weevil- Carbaryl -0.1%  Burrowing nematode (radophilus similes)- Carbofuran 3G  Root-knot nematode (meloidogyne spp)

Notas del editor

  1. Uses : landscaping, pot plant, cut in florescence
  2. landscaping,
  3. Pot plants
  4. South East Asia and Africa are considered as a primary and secondary centers of diversity (Simmonds, 1962, 1966) for banana
  5. Ensete ventricosum and its sub species like E. ventricosum Maurrelli (Abyssinian banana) and their dwarf types are suitable for home gardening.
  6. Musella lasiocarpa- Chinese dwarf banana, golden lotus banana, Chinese yellow banana. 2500msl, winter hardy, 3 to 5 ft hight
  7. Musa and Musella, form offsets freely from the rhizome (suckers) but Ensete almost never forms any, the main pseudostem of bananas is monocarpic (it dies after flowering) after which the next oldest sucker grows to replace it. With most bananas, many pseudostems will grow at the same time and form a colony covering a small area. Since Ensete plants do not sucker it dies after flowering. Ensete pare ropagated by seeds