• Axolotl@feddit.it
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    6 hours ago

    I doubt because in that case we do have seeds of the plant and it can be put in a greenhouse, generally the situation is way different, i’il explain myself better:

    Gran michele is now extinct because of how it was cultivated; In practice, to avoid having seeds in the fruit, production was carried out using cuttings, so practically all Gran Michele plants were clones of a group of other Gran Michele plants, meaning that genetic mutations never developed. Since none of them had developed a mutation capable of resisting a fungus (the name of which I cannot remember), they ALL died and we simply didn’t had seeds

    • tiramichu@sh.itjust.works
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      5 hours ago

      You can still buy the Gros Michel banana nowadays. It’s not extinct, but is a rare and expensive speciality, rather than the common type of banana we see on the shelves like it used to be.

      $37 USD per banana, on this particular site

      If climate change makes growing Arabica coffee commercially non-viable at scale and all the growers move to hardier alternatives, then Arabica will still exist - absolutely - but instead of being the coffee you can drink every day it will also become a rare and expensive speciality, just like the banana.

      • arrow74@lemmy.zip
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        3 hours ago

        Wow that’s gone up me and a few coworkers ordered a box a couple of years ago and it was like $9 per banana.

        They were good, I see the appeal of the variety, but they were not $9 banana good. Let alone $37 banana good.