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Blue Roses - Blue Is The Colour!
http://www.shopperarticles.com/Blue-Roses---Blue-Is-The-Colour/a17915_1
Arena Flowers
 
By Arena Flowers
Published on 11/12/2009
 
Roses are red. Yellow, Pink, White and even Orange., But have you ever heard of blue roses!? The quest for producing blue roses has been a holy grail to rose breeders for many years. Although, it is possible to buy blue roses in the market, these flowers just don%u2019t exist in nature.

Blue Roses - Blue Is The Colour!

Roses are red. Yellow, Pink, White and even Orange., But have you ever heard of blue roses!? No. That's because blue roses just don't exist. Indeed, it would have made a great addition to the incredible beauty of the rose family. In fact, it will. Advancement in biotechnology research has made growing blue roses a reality. You could probably be sending a bunch of fresh blue roses to your special some one for Valentine's Day, Birthday, Wedding Anniversary, Engagement or for those special romantic occasions soon!

Roses for a long time have been an epitome of love and beauty. It is an extraordinary flower of delicate grace and enchantment. Roses have so many different shades and each of these shades symbolises specific meanings. While red roses signify romance, white roses are for innocence and purity, pink is for happiness and joy, orange suggests passion and enthusiasm and yellow is for friendship. Now what does blue rose stand for?

Apparently, as with the enigma associated with growing the flower, it stands for mystery!!! But the real mystery is will there ever be blue roses in the bouquets you send out to your loved ones? Probably! Thanks to the industrious collaboration of Suntory, a Japanese Distiller and Australian Biotechnology firm Florigene, a subsidiary of Suntory, blue roses could be a commercial reality.

The quest for producing blue roses has been a holy grail to rose breeders for many years. Although, it is possible to buy blue roses in the market, these flowers just don't exist in nature. Often, it is a bunch of white roses which are dyed to achieve the special blue colour. But think about the environmental impact of buying dyed roses rather than fresh flowers. Nevertheless, rapid progress in the field of biotechnology has helped researchers from Suntory and Florigene to genetically modify the gene of an enzyme called "delphinidin" which is found to be missing in roses. Florigene has managed to infuse this particular enzyme to the rose plant, thereby growing 100 percent fresh blue roses.

With a bloom available to celebrate every emotion, it probably explains roses' giant market share of $10 billion a year in the fresh-cut flower industry. Now the newer addition of blue roses, might just fuel up the market share to soar to further high levels.