FOOD
Use our resources to learn more about bananas and other fresh fruits and vegetables.
Teachers, scroll down for a quick list of key resources in our Teachers’ Toolkit.

Photograph by Rebecca Hale, National Geographic
Discussion Ideas
- According to the 5-minute SciShow video, the Cavendish bananas we see in the store are actually clones. What are clones?
- A clone is a cell or group of cells that is genetically identical to its ancestor. The DNA of every Cavendish banana is exactly the same as every other Cavendish banana.
- Why are clones highly vulnerable to disease?
- Absolutely no genetic variation. According to the video (cue up to about 1:05), “there’s no chance that one banana plant will have a gene that makes it resistant” to a disease. “If a parasite or fungus can kill one banana, it can potentially kill every banana of that type.”

Photograph by Jeanne Modderman, National Geographic
- How do we know a single fungus (also, it should be noted, a clone) can wipe out an entire species of banana?
- It’s happened before. Prior to the 1950s, the only banana most Americans were familiar with was the Gros Michel, a variety that is larger and fruitier than the bananas we know today. Like Cavendishes, Gros Michels were clones. When Panama disease infected the Gros Michel, the Gros Michel was virtually wiped out of the international market. (Enter the Cavendish.)

Map by Ordonez N, Seidl MF, Waalwijk C, Drenth A, Kilian A, Thomma BPHJ, et al., courtesy PLoS Pathogens. CC-BY-4.0.
- A new strain of Panama disease called TR4 has already spread from Australia to Southeast Asia, the Indian subcontinent, the Middle East, and Africa. Why is its impact on the African banana crop “especially concerning”?
- According to the video (cue up to about 2:35), “TR4 in Africa is especially concerning because bananas in many parts of Africa are a staple crop and a major component of national food security.”
- Why is destroying an infected crop not a solution?
- According to the video (cue up to about 3:13), TR4 is spread through soil, and once the soil has been infected, it can never again be used for growing Cavendish bananas. “The only way to get rid of TR4 is with fungicidal soil treatments that are so toxic and harmful to the environment that they’re prohibited pretty much everywhere.”
- It’s only a matter of time before TR4 reaches the precious Cavendishes of the Americas. Why is this “especially concerning”?
- South and Central America are the world’s largest banana exporters. A banana blight would devastate the Latin American economy, as well as the relatively tiny U.S. banana industry, mostly limited to plantations in Hawaii and Florida.
- Infestation of the American banana crop could be the end of our precious Cavendishes. Oh no! What will we put on our cereal? What will we cover with ice cream?
- Another cultivar, probably. Cultivars are plants that have almost always been created by human activity—selecting desirable characteristics from related plants and carefully propagating them. Cavendishes themselves are cultivars, meaning they were carefully cultivated for desirable characteristics such as tiny seeds, thin skin, and resistance to rot.
- Take a look at this cool poster for some banana cultivars grown on the Big Island of Hawaii. Some are yellow, some are green, some are red, some are ice cream. (Yes, it’s a real thing. Ice cream bananas are also called blue java bananas, and they supposedly taste like vanilla custard or ice cream.)
- According to researchers, “developing new banana cultivars, however, requires major investments in research and development and the recognition of the banana as a global staple and cash crop (rather than an orphan crop) that supports the livelihoods of millions of small-holder farmers.”
- Another cultivar, probably. Cultivars are plants that have almost always been created by human activity—selecting desirable characteristics from related plants and carefully propagating them. Cavendishes themselves are cultivars, meaning they were carefully cultivated for desirable characteristics such as tiny seeds, thin skin, and resistance to rot.
- What characteristics would you look for in a cultivar to replace the Cavendish? Think about taste, price, nutrition, the global shipping network, and agricultural requirements such as climate, soil conditions, and labor input.
- Would your answers change if you were the owner of a banana plantation? How about if you were an entry-level worker on the plantation?
- Would your answers change if you were a banana-importing country?
- Would your answers change if you were a resident of a developing country who depended on bananas for nutrition?
- Would your answers change if you were a Latin American farmer who wanted to break into the banana market? How about an Alaskan farmer?
TEACHERS’ TOOLKIT
SciShow: Bananas Are Losing the War on Fungus
Nat Geo: Fresh Fruits and Vegetables
Student Science: Banana threat: Attack of the clones
(extra credit!) PLoS Pathogens: Worse Comes to Worst: Bananas and Panama Disease—When Plant and Pathogen Clones Meet
(extra credit!) Annals of Botany: Domestication, Genomics and the Future for Banana
4 thoughts on “Demise of the Clones”