A berry resembling a blackberry that comes in white, red and black varieties Their flavor is sweet and somewhat bland The leaves of the white mulberry are used in silkworm cultivation
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sweet usually dark purple blackberry-like fruit of any of several mulberry trees of the genus Morus any of several trees of the genus Morus having edible fruit that resembles the blackberry
(Morus) Round pleasant tree Varieties included a Common Red, which had sweet fruit used like raisins or currants, good shade; and two smooth-leaved varieties used for silk-worm production, one with a white fruit, the other with a black berry The leaves of the White Mulberry were used as food for silkworms
Family Moraceae, composed of about 1,000 species of deciduous or evergreen trees in about 40 genera, found mostly in tropical and subtropical regions. Plants of the family contain a milky latex and produce multiple fused fruits. Edible fruits grow on the common mulberry (genus Morus), fig (in the largest genus, Ficus), and breadfruit. Silkworms (see silkworm moth) feed almost exclusively on the leaves of the white mulberry (M. alba). Among the ornamentals in the family are the paper mulberry and the Osage orange (Maclura pomifera). Other species include the India rubber tree, which is often placed in office lobbies, and the wide-spreading banyan tree
a small tree of the madder family found from India to Australasia, characterized by shiny leaves, white flowers, and fleshy, yellowish fruit; Morinda citrifolia
shrubby Asiatic tree having bark (tapa) that resembles cloth; grown as a shade tree in Europe and America; male flowers are pendulous catkins and female are urn-shaped followed by small orange-red aggregate berries