Prunus Serotina Fruit

TL;DR. This ingredient is used mainly as a botanical skin-conditioning material, adding it-derived sugars, organic acids, polyphenols, and color compounds to a formula. It may also support antioxidant positioning in leave-on and rinse-off products.

What does Prunus Serotina Fruit do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is used mainly as a botanical skin-conditioning material, adding it-derived sugars, organic acids, polyphenols, and color compounds to a formula. It may also support antioxidant positioning in leave-on and rinse-off products.

Is Prunus Serotina Fruit clean?

From a clean-beauty perspective, this ingredient is generally well accepted and not a common restricted-list concern. As with many botanical materials, sensitivity depends on extraction quality, residual proteins, aroma constituents, and overall formula level.

Is Prunus Serotina Fruit sustainable?

This material is plant-derived, renewable, and expected to be readily biodegradable. Its footprint depends mostly on agricultural sourcing, water use, drying or extraction energy, and whether the supply chain uses solvent-efficient processing.

Is Prunus Serotina Fruit COSMOS-approved?

It is generally compatible with COSMOS-natural standards when processed with approved methods, and it can fit COSMOS-organic standards when the agricultural source is certified organic. Its Green Chemistry profile is favorable when made with water, glycerin, ethanol, or other lower-impact extraction systems.

How does Prunus Serotina Fruit work chemically?

This material is a botanical matrix rich in water-soluble sugars, organic acids, polyphenols, anthocyanin-type pigments, and trace volatile compounds, depending on whether it is supplied as a juice, powder, or extract. Use levels vary by extract strength, often below a few percent for concentrated aqueous or glycolic extracts, and its pigment and phenolic fractions are sensitive to pH, heat, light, and air.

Last updated 2026-05-13