Moju ne treba. Moja je već identificirana kao kultivar Musa Fen Ba Jiao ( Fenjiao podgrupe ), i kao takva je kupljena.
Tvoju istina treba. Jer može biti bilo koja od 32 Dajiao kultivara.

A to ''The species is used to feed pigs'' se odnosi na Musu Balbisianu u tekstu.

5.
Musa balbisiana Colla, Mem. Gen. Musa, 56. 1820.
野蕉
ye jiaoMusa dechangensis J. L. Liu & M. G. Liu; M. lushanensis J. L. Liu; M. luteola J. L. Liu; M. ×paradisiaca Linnaeus subsp. seminifera (Loureiro) Baker; M. seminifera Loureiro.
Pseudostems clumped, yellow-green, often with large, black markings, ca. 6 m. Petiole 60–75 cm, margin open, ca. 2 cm wide, often closed when young; leaf blade adaxially green and slightly pruinose or not, ovate-oblong, ca. 2.9 m × 90 cm, base auriculate, asymmetric. Inflorescence pendulous, ca. 2.5 m; peduncle and rachis glabrous. Bracts of bisexual and male flow-ers adaxially purple-red, abaxially brownish purple to yellow-green and pruinose, ovate to lanceolate, persistent, apex obtuse, reflexed after flowering; bracts of female flowers deciduous. Male flowers up to 20 per bract, in 2 rows. Compound tepal adaxially pale purple, abaxially pale purple-white, 4–5 cm, stri-ate, teeth yellow to orange; free tepal milky white, translucent, obovate, ca. 1/2 as long as compound tepal, apex emarginate, shortly mucronate-apiculate. Infructescence pendulous, with ca. 8 clusters (“hands”) each of 15 or 16 berries in 2 rows. Berries gray-green, obovoid, ca. 13 × 4 cm, distinctly angled at ma-turity, base narrowed into a stalk ca. 2.5 cm, apex contracted or not into a short, angled column ca. 2 cm. Seeds numerous, brown, oblate, 5–10 mm in diam., minutely warty. 2n = 22.
Ravines in evergreen forests; ca. 1100 m. Guangdong, Guangxi, Hainan, Xizang, W Yunnan [India, Indonesia (Java), Malaysia, Myan-mar, Nepal, New Guinea, Philippines, Sikkim, Sri Lanka, Thailand].
The Chinese cultivars “Fen Ba Jiao” and “Da Jiao” are triploid forms of this species recognized by Li (Acta Phytotax. Sin. 16(3): 54–56. 1978) and Wang (J. Trop. Subtrop. Bot 3: 49–53. 1995).
The species is used to feed pigs.6.
Musa ×paradisiaca Linnaeus, Sp. Pl. 2: 1043. 1753.
大蕉
da jiaoMusa ×paradisiaca subsp. sapientum (Linnaeus) Kuntze; M. sapientum Linnaeus.
Pseudostems clumped, pruinose, 3–7 m. Leaves erect or ascending; petiole pruinose, more than 30 cm, margin closed; leaf blade adaxially deep green, abaxially light green and dis-tinctly pruinose, oblong, 1.5–3 m × 40–60 cm, base subcordate to auriculate, subsymmetric, apex acute. Inflorescence pendu-lous; rachis glabrous. Bracts adaxially deep red, abaxially pur-ple, ovate to ovate-lanceolate, 15–30 cm or more, deciduous. Flowers in 2 rows in each bract; male flowers with tepals yel-low to pale yellow. Compound tepal 4–6.5 cm; free tepal subor-bicular to oblong, ca. 1/2 as long as compound tepal, waxy, apex acuminate or rolling into a sac. Infructescence with 7 or 8 clusters of berries. Berries erect or slightly curved, oblong, 10–20 cm, angled; pulp sweet or sweet and acidic, not very fragrant; stalk elongate. Seeds absent or few. 2n = 33.
Cultivated. Fujian, Guangdong, Guangxi, Hainan, Taiwan, Yun-nan [native to tropical Asia, widely cultivated in the tropics].
Musa ×paradisiaca is a hybrid between M. acuminata and M. balbisiana.
The species is grown for its edible fruit.