Pisang Seribu in the limelight

You know those websites which do nothing but reproduce photographs of weird and wonderful things, usually as a way of getting you to buy something, often weird but probably not very wonderful? Well, sometimes images get posted from there to Facebook or whatever, and indeed some go viral, no doubt resulting in huge profits for someone or other. The image I saw yesterday didn’t go viral, but it was certainly weird and wonderful enough to do so. It’s of a hugely long bunch of tiny bananas, and you can see it in the original place I saw it, but I’ll reproduce a better photo below.

banana

I was able to find it, 1 at a blog called Smell the Coffee, thanks to our friends at ProMusa. I posted the original link on their Facebook page, and also on Twitter, and within minutes I heard back with the full monty on our strange banana.

The cultivar is called Pisang Seribu in Malaysia and Indonesia, pisang being the Malay word for banana and seribu meaning a thousand. We have it on good authority that the fruit are ‘delightfully edible’. The other unusual thing about this cultivar, besides the high number of fruit, is that the latter didn’t develop from female flowers but neutral flowers, which usually wither away and do not develop into fruit nor produce pollen. Pisang Seribu doesn’t have a Musapedia page yet, but it is featured on the Cultivar Diversity portal… In Vietnam, it is called Chuoi Tram Nai. Chuoi is the Vietnamese word for banana, Tram means 100, and (I think) Nai means hands.

So maybe now the thing will go viral in the agricultural biodiversity community at least. Thanks to ProMusa.

Heirlooms oversimplified?

Heirloom seeds are usually open-pollinated, meaning that wind or insects fertilize the seed. They’ll breed true to their parent plants, so if you harvest the seeds and replant them you will get the same variety.

Is it just me, or does this strike you as a huge over-simplification — not to say error? And there’s more — lots more — where that came from.

Fancy maps you cannot share

I love the animated maps of crop and livestock production in different countries at Show®World. But has anyone been able to embed them, or even download the images? Because I haven’t. And this screengrab is pretty lame by comparison.

map

Featured: MacGyver

RachaelL tells us to dry our eyes:

Giving a varied diet a “fair crack” IS being done: fundamentally that’s what any development program is trying to do because if you’re wealthier you’re going to chose a varied diet. But it’s not happening very fast in some regions. Should children be harmed while we wait for the long process of the entire world becoming sufficiently wealthy?

Read the whole thing.