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In a field of mature bananas, plants can be seen at all stages of
vegetative growth and fruit maturity, providing a fascination for
anyone who has an interest in growing crops. Banana farmers in the
tropics can harvest fruit every day of the year. The absence of
seasonality in production is an advantage, in that it provides a
continuity of carbohydrate to meet dietary needs as well as a
regular source of income, a feature that perhaps has been
under-estimated by rural planners and agricultural strategists. The
burgeoning interest in bananas in the last 20 years results from
the belated realization that Musa is an under-exploited genus,
notwithstanding the fact that one genetically narrow group, the
Cavendish cultivars, supply a major export commodity second only to
citrus in terms of the world fruit trade. International research
interest in the diversity of fruit types has been slow to develop,
presumably because bananas and plantains have hitherto been
regarded as a reliable backyard source of dessert fruit or starch
supplying the needs of the household, and in this situation
relatively untroubled by pests, diseases or agronomic problems.
In a field of mature bananas, plants can be seen at all stages of
vegetative growth and fruit maturity, providing a fascination for
anyone who has an interest in growing crops. Banana farmers in the
tropics can harvest fruit every day of the year. The absence of
seasonality in production is an advantage, in that it provides a
continuity of carbohydrate to meet dietary needs as well as a
regular source of income, a feature that perhaps has been
under-estimated by rural planners and agricultural strategists. The
burgeoning interest in bananas in the last 20 years results from
the belated realization that Musa is an under-exploited genus,
notwithstanding the fact that one genetically narrow group, the
Cavendish cultivars, supply a major export commodity second only to
citrus in terms of the world fruit trade. International research
interest in the diversity of fruit types has been slow to develop,
presumably because bananas and plantains have hitherto been
regarded as a reliable backyard source of dessert fruit or starch
supplying the needs of the household, and in this situation
relatively untroubled by pests, diseases or agronomic problems.
The Oxford Classical Texts, or Scriptorum Classicorum Bibliotheca
Oxoniensis, are renowned for their reliability and presentation.
The series consists of a text without commentary but with a brief
apparatus criticus at the front of each page. There are now over
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the works of all the principal classical authors. Although this has
been largely accomplished, new volumes are still being published to
fill the remaining gaps, and old editions are being revised in the
light of recent research or replaced.
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