Why do fruits get sweeter with time?

586 views

Why do fruits get sweeter with time?

In: Biology

2 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

Plants can’t move and this makes it difficult for plants to get their seeds (their offspring) situated in a good location to sprout and grow far enough away from the mother-plant such that mother and offspring won’t compete for the same resources.

Some plants have solved this problem by evolving to make fruit in order to entice animals such as birds, bats, and monkeys to carry away their seeds and deposit those seeds far away from the mother-plant.

Think of edible fruit as a payment or bribe that the plant pays to the animal to perform the service of carrying the seeds far away.

While a fruit is still growing (i.e., unripe), the seed is not fully matured yet and so not ready to be planted. If an animal eats the fruit too soon, that defeats the purpose.

Accordingly, plants make their unripe fruit very unappetizing. Unripe fruits are hard, sour, bitter, astringent, and green like leaves to prevent animals from eating them too soon.

Then, once the seed is mature enough to be carried away, the fruit ripens and becomes delicious: sweet, soft, fragrant and brightly colored, in order to entice animals to come take the seeds away and drop them somewhere else.

You are viewing 1 out of 2 answers, click here to view all answers.