Should it be moved to Temperate Fruit? Sure, the subject is species from those latitudes, but the context is growing them in the Tropics. Though I suppose finding this thread might be easier going by point-of-origin for the species. I guess it's worth thinking over.
As far as I can tell, Mora denotes mulberry, with Zarzamora being blackberry, though some locales might drop the "Zarza" part for brevity's sake.
I tried two haskaps with compatible flowering times (since they're self-sterile): Blue Sea, and Blue Moon, planted in one-gallon pots. According to the info I've found, late bloomers do better than early ones in warmer regions. They grew well the first season, but eventually stopped progressing. They looked like they would have benefited from chill hours, but I can't say for certain. One of them (maybe Blue Sea) eventually lost all green growth, and never put on new growth. When I checked a couple of months later, it was dead and dry. The other one kept pushing small amounts of green growth periodically, but I killed it when I put it in full sun (D'oh!). That said, their prior situation was fairly bright as well, and that (coupled with low moisture from being root-bound) is probably what killed 'em off. If you've got space, I think they're worth experimenting with, but it's probably best to wait for (or contribute to) the development of more heat-tolerant varieties.
There are loads of berries that'll fruit in the tropics (and loads of species that deserve to be tested). The trick is figuring out which ones would best be tested. This guy grows loads of temperates without fuss (as do many of his lowland customers). If the segment they did on him on local TV is any indication, getting them to fruit is a matter of getting the right varieties (no more than 200 chill hours, preferably less), and giving them the appropriate care for a tropical environment. Here's the link (and the website's full of the different varieties he grows):
www.nebaifruitgarden.comAs for me, under poor circumstances, most of my berries have survived (and a few have even thrived). Note, my soil is very poor, and I almost never fertilize (and I've only been at this proactively for 4 years). Too much on my plate at the moment, but I can't wait to see how they fare when I get a proper plot of land and a steady income for the materials they need. The Alpine Strawberries have been the most productive for me (despite even worse abuse than what i gave my other plants), but I've also got an unnamed blackberry, and three species of Raspberry (Rosifolius, 'Caroline' and 'Black Hawk'), as well as 'Cabot' Strawberry (which has been mostly unproductive, but I've gotten several small crops from my poorly-cared-for plants). The raspberries have been VERY vigorous for me (especially the black one), but they (the red one) only started producing now, after putting them in bigger pots in september.
As for tropical species, I have a young Black Mulberry tree, Cape Gooseberries, a few Muntingia seedlings, and two seedlings of Maclura cochinchinensis. Other species I've been meaning to test: Lonicera fragrantissima, Ribes aureum, Vaccinium floribundum, V. consanguineum, V. reticulatum, V. meridionale, Ugni myricoides, Austromyrtus 'Coppertops', Kunzea pomifera, Maclura tricuspidata, M. tinctoria, Rubus niveus, R. calycinoides, R. probus, R. 'Giant Raspberry of Jilin', R. moluccanus, R. reflexus, R. macraei, Maqui Berry, Goji Berry, and several more. I'm planning some breeding projects for tropical berries, but for now I have bigger hybrids to fry.
So, if you're willing to test, there's endless possibilities. If you want a sure thing, there's still a few options left for you to get your berry fix.