No accounting for taste? Giant sloths, ancient pumpkins, and evolutionary genetics in bitter taste receptors.

No accounting for taste? Giant sloths, ancient pumpkins, and evolutionary genetics in bitter taste receptors.

Though domesticated pumpkins and other gourds (think zucchinis, acorn squashes, butternut squashes), are edible (and tasty!), their wild cousins produce a toxic bitter compound, rendering them poisonous to humans, even in small amounts. Anyone who has ever picked a pumpkin and hauled it home might be wondering…why on earth would a plant produce fruit weighing more-than-some-dogs that no one can eat?

Well, its turns out there's an answer. And it involves some Jurassic Park level science (but better, because it's real). Read on, fellow nerds…

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