Science
How a Fruit in Your Garden Gets Its Shiny Blue Color – The New York Times
Slabs of fat help give Viburnum tinus its gleam.

Big, leafy viburnum bushes have lined yards in the United States and Europe for decades their domes of blossoms have an understated attractiveness. But once the flowers of the Viburnum tinus plant fade, the shrub makes something unusual: shiny, brilliantly blue fruit.
Scientists had noticed that pigments related to those in blueberries exist in viburnum fruit, and assumed that this must be the source of their odd hue. Blue fruit, after all, is rare. But researchers reported last week in Current…
-
General22 hours ago
Donald Trump’s initial 10 per cent tariff takes effect
-
General21 hours ago
Jaguar Land Rover in UK pauses shipments to US
-
General18 hours ago
Texas opens probe into Kellogg’s health claims, dyes
-
General17 hours ago
Australian share market set to dive as threat of US recession grows