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Título: | Banana. |
Autor: | BORGES, A. L.![]() ![]() SOUZA, L. da S. ![]() ![]() OLIVEIRA, A. M. G. ![]() ![]() |
Afiliación: | Ana Lúcia Borges, CNPMF; Luciano da Silva Souza, CNPMF; Arlene Maria Gomes Oliveira, CNPMF. |
Año: | 2007 |
Referencia: | In: CRISÓSTOMO, L. A.; NAUMOV, A.; JOHNSTON, A. E. (Ed.). Fertilizing for high yield and quality tropical fruits of Brazil. Horgen: International Potash Institute, 2007. p. 31-49. |
Descripción: | The banana belongs to the family Musa and is grown in most tropical countries. It is an important food consumed world-wide and it can be eaten unripe or ripe, raw or processed (cooked, fried, roasted or processed). The fruit contains vitamins (A, B and C), minerals (calcium, potassium and iron) and has few calories (90 to 120 Kcal/100 g). The fruit is approximately 70% water; the solid material is principally carbohydrates (23 to 32 g/100 g) with little protein (1.0 to 1.3 g/100 g) and fat (0.37 to 0.48/100 g). In 2004, world banana production was approximately 73 million mt. The largest producer was India (23%), followed by Brazil (9%), then China and Ecuador (8% respectively). World production of plantains and bananas was 33 million mt. While the African continent, had the lowest production of plantains per unit area (5.72 mt/ha), it was nevertheless responsible for 70% of this total production. Major producing countries are Uganda (30% of the world production), Columbia (20%) and Rwanda (8%) (FAO, 2006). |
Thesagro: | Banana |
Citación: | (IPI. Bulletin, 18). |
ISBN: | 978-3-9523243-1-8 |
Tipo de Material: | Parte de livro |
Acceso: | openAccess |
Aparece en las colecciones: | Artigo em periódico indexado (CNPMF)![]() ![]() |
Ficheros en este ítem:
Fichero | Descripción | Tamaño | Formato | |
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IPI-Bulletin-18-Tropical-Fruits-32-50.pdf | 214.75 kB | Adobe PDF | ![]() Visualizar/Abrir |