Cannabis
Botany
by R. C.
Clarke
CHAPTER
1
Sinsemilla Life
Cycle of Cannabis
CHAPTER
2
Propagation of
Cannabis
CHAPTER
3
Genetics and
Breeding of Cannabis
CHAPTER
4
Maturation and
Harvesting of Cannabis
Chapter
1 - Sinsemilla Life Cycle of
Cannabis
Cannabis is a tall,
erect, annual cannabis. Provided with an open
sunny environment, light well-drained composted
soil, and ample irrigation, Cannabiscan grow to a
height of 6 meters (about 20 feet) in a 4-6 month
growing season. Exposed river banks, meadows, and
agricultural lands are ideal habitats for Cannabis
since all offer good sunlight. In this example an
imported seed from Thailand is grown without
pruning and becomes a large female plant. A cross
with a cutting from a male plant of Mexican origin
results in hybrid seed which is stored for later
planting. This example is representative of the
outdoor growth of Cannabis in temperate
climates.
Seeds are planted in
the spring and usually germinate in 3 to 7 days.
The seedling emerges from the ground by the
straightening of the hypocotyl (embryonic stem).
The cotyledons (seed leaves) are slightly unequal
in size, narrowed to the base and rounded or blunt
to the tip. The hypocotyl ranges from 1 to 10
centimeters (1A to 3 inches) in length. About 10
centimeters or less above the cotyledons, the
first true leaves arise, a pair of oppositely
oriented single leaflets each with a distinct
petiole (leaf stem) rotated one-quarter turn from
the cotyledons. Subsequent pairs of leaves arise
in opposite formation and a variously shaped leaf
sequence develops with the second pair of leaves
having 3 leaflets, the third 5 and so on up to 11
leaflets. Occasionally the first pair of leaves
will have 3 leaflets each rather than 1 and the
second pair, 5 leaflets each.
If a plant is not
crowded, limbs will grow from small buds (located
at the intersection of petioles) along the main
stem. Each sinsemilla (seedless drug Cannabis)
plant is provided with plenty of room to grow long
axial limbs and extensive fine roots to increase
floral production. Under favorable conditions
Cannabis grows up to 7 centimeters (21A inches) a
day in height during the long days of
summer.
Cannabis shows a dual
response to daylength; during the first two to
three months of growth it responds to increasing
daylength with more vigorous growth, but in the
same season the plant requires shorter days to
flower and complete its life cycle.
LIFE CYCLE OF
CANNABIS I Juvenile Stage
Cannabis flowers when
exposed to a critical daylength which varies with
the strain. Critical daylength applies only to
plants which fail to flower under continuous
illumination, since those which flower under
continuous illumination have no critical
daylength. Most strains have an absolute
requirement of inductive photoperiods (short days
or long nights) to induce fertile flowering and
less than this will result in the formation of
undifferentiated primordia (unformed flowers)
only.
The time taken to
form primordia varies with the length of the
inductive photoperiod. Given 10 hours per day of
light a strain may only take 10 days to flower,
whereas if given 16 hours per day it may take up
to 90 days. Inductive photoperiods of less than 8
hours per day do not seem to accelerate primordia
formation. Dark (night) cycles must be
uninterrupted to induce flowering (see
appendix).
Cannabis is a
dioecious plant, which means that the male and
female flowers develop on separate plants,
although monoecious examples with both sexes on
one plant are found. The development of branches
containing flowering organs varies greatly between
males and females: the male flowers hang in long,
loose, multi-branched, clustered limbs up to 30
centimeters (12 inches) long, while the female
flowers are tightly crowded between small
leaves.
Note: Female Cannabis
flowers and plants will be referred to as
pistillate and male flowers and plants will be
referred to as staminate in the remainder of this
text. This convention is more accurate and makes
examples of complex aberrant sexuality easier to
understand.
The first sign of
flowering in Cannabis is the appearance of
undifferentiated flower primordia along the main
stem at the nodes (intersections) of the petiole,
behind the stipule (leaf spur). In the prefloral
phase, the sexes of Cannabis are indistinguishable
except for general trends in shape.
When the primordia
first appear they are undifferentiated sexually,
but soon the males can be identified by their
curved claw shape, soon followed by the
differentiation of round pointed flower buds
having five radial segments. The females are
recognized by the enlargement of a symmetrical
tubular calyx (floral sheath). They are easier to
recognize at a young age than male primordia. The
first female calyxes tend to lack paired pistils
(pollen-catching appendages) though initial male
flowers often mature and shed viable pollen. In
some individuals, especially hybrids, small
non-flowering limbs will form at the nodes and are
often confused with male primordia.
Cultivators wait
until actual flowers form to positively determine
the sex of Cannabis
The female plants
tend to be shorter and have more branches than the
male. Female plants are leafy to the top with many
leaves surrounding the flowers, while male plants
have fewer leaves near the top with few if any
leaves along the extended flowering
limbs.
*The term pistil has
developed a special meaning with respect to
Cannabiswhich differs slightly from the precise
botanical definition. This has come about mainly
from the large number of cultivators who have
casual knowledge of plant anatomy but an intense
interest in the reproduction of Cannabis. The
precise definition of pistil refers to the
combination of ovary, style and stigma. In the
more informal usage, pistil refers to the fused
style and stigma. The informal sense is used
throughout the book since it has become common
practice among Cannabis cultivators.
The female flowers
appear as two long white, yellow, or pink pistils
protruding from the fold of a very thin membranous
calyx. The calyx is covered with resin exuding
glandular trichomes (hairs). Pistillate flowers
are borne in pairs at the nodes one on each side
of the petiole behind the stipule of bracts
(reduced leaves) which conceal the flowers. The
calyx measures 2 to 6 millimeters in length and is
closely applied to, and completely contains, the
ovary.
In male flowers, five
petals (approximately 5 millimeters, or 3/16 inch,
long) make up the calyx and may be yellow, white,
or green in color. They hang down, and five
stamens (approximately 5 millimeters long) emerge,
consisting of slender anthers (pollen sacs),
splitting upwards from the tip and suspended on
thin filaments. The exterior surface of the
staminate calyx is covered with non-glandular
trichomes. The pollen grains are nearly spherical
slightly yellow, and 25 to 30 microns (p) in
diameter. The surface is smooth and exhibits 2 to
4 germ pores.
Before the start of
flowering, the phyllotaxy (leaf arrangement)
reverses and the number of leaflets per leaf
decreases until a small single leaflet appears
below each pair of calyxes. The phyllotaxy also
changes from decussate (opposite) to alternate
(staggered) and usually remains alternate
throughout the floral stages regardless of sexual
type.
The differences in
flowering patterns of male and female plants are
expressed in many ways. Soon after dehiscence
(pollen shedding) the staminate plant dies, while
the pistillate plant may mature up to five months
after viable flowers are formed if little or no
fertilization occurs. Compared with pistillate
plants, staminate plants show a more rapid
increase in height and a more rapid decrease in
leaf size to the bracts which accompany the
flowers. Staminate plants tend to flower up to one
month earlier than pistillate plants; however,
pistillate plants often differentiate primordia
one to two weeks before staminate
plants.
Many factors
contribute to determining the sexuality of a
flowering Cannabisplant. Under average conditions
with a normal inductive photoperiod, Cannabiswill
bloom and produce approximately equal numbers of
pure staminate and pure pistillate plants with a
few hermaphrodites (both sexes on the same plant).
Under conditions of extreme stress, such as
nutrient excess or deficiency, mutilation, and
altered light cycles, populations have been shown
to depart greatly from the expected one-to-one
staminate to pistillate ratio.
Just prior to
dehiscence, the pollen nucleus divides to produce
a small reproductive cell accompanied by a large
vegetative cell, both of which are contained
within the mature pollen grain. Germination occurs
15 to 20 minutes after contact with a pistil. As
the pollen tube grows the vegetative cell remains
in the pollen grain while the generative cell
enters the pollen tube and migrates toward the
ovule. The generative cell divides into two
gametes (sex cells) as it travels the length of
the pollen tube.
Pollination of the
pistillate flower results in the loss of the
paired pistils and a swelling of the tubular calyx
where the ovule is enlarging. The staminate plants
die after shedding pollen. After approximately 14
to 35 days the seed is matured and drops from the
plant, leaving the dry calyx attached to the stem.
This completes the normally 4 to 6 month life
cycle, which may take as little as 2 months or as
long as 10 months. Fresh seeds approach 100%
viability, but this decreases with age.
The hard mature seed
is partially surrounded by the calyx and is
variously patterned in grey, brown, or black.
Elongated and slightly compressed, it measures 2
to 6 millimeters (1/16 to 3/16 inch) in length and
2 to 4 millimeters (1/16 to 1/8 inch) in maximum
diameter.
Careful closed
pollinations of a fewselected limbs yield hundreds
of seeds of known parentage, which are removed
after they are mature and beginning to fall from
the calyxes. The remaining floral clusters are
sinsemilla or seedless and continue to mature on
the plant. As the unfertilized calyxes swell, the
glandular trichomes on the surface grow and
secrete aromatic THC-laden resins. The mature,
pungent, sticky floral clusters are harvested,
dried, and sampled. The preceding simplified life
cycle of sinsemilla Cannabis exemplifies the
production of valuable seeds without compromising
the production of seedless floral
clusters.
Chapter
2 - Propagation of Cannabis
"Make the most of the Indian
Hemp Seed and sow it every where."
- George
Washington
Sexual versus Asexual
Propagation
Cannabis can be
propagated either sexually or asexually. Seeds are
the result of sexual propagation. Because sexual
propagation involves the recombination of genetic
material from two parents we expect to observe
variation among seedlings and offspring with
characteristics differing from those of the
parents. Vegetative methods of propagation
(cloning) such as cuttage, layerage, or division
of roots are asexual and allow exact replication
of the parental plant without genetic variation.
Asexual propagation, in theory, allows strains to
be preserved unchanged through many seasons and
hundreds of individuals.
When the difference
between sexual and asexual propagation is well
understood then the proper method can be chosen
for each situation. The unique characteristics of
a plant result from the combination of genes in
chromosomes present in each cell, collectively
known as the genotype of that individual. The
expression of a genotype, as influenced by the
environment, creates a set of visible
characteristics that we collectively term the
phenotype. The function of propagation is to
preserve special genotypes by choosing the proper
technique to ensure replication of the desired
characteristics.
If two clones from a
pistillate Cannabis plant are placed in differing
environments, shade and sun for in stance, their
genotypes will remain identical. However, the
clone grown in the shade will grow tall and
slender and mature late, while the clone grown in
full sun will remain short and bushy and mature
much earlier.
Sexual Propagation
Sexual propagation
requires the union of staminate pollen and
pistillate ovule, the formation of viable seed,
and the creation of individuals with newly
recombinant genotypes. Pollen and ovules are
formed by reduction divisions (meiosis) in which
the 10 chromosome pairs fail to replicate, so that
each of the two daughter-cells contains one-half
of the chromosomes from the mother cell. This is
known as the haploid (in) condition where in = 10
chromosomes. The diploid condition is restored
upon fertilization resulting in diploid (2n)
individuals with a haploid set of chromosomes from
each parent. Offspring may resemble the staminate,
pistillate, both, or neither parent and
considerable variation in offspring is to be
expected. Traits may be controlled by a single
gene or a combination of genes, resulting in
further potential diversity.
The terms homozygous
and heterozygous are useful in describing the
genotype of a particular plant. If the genes
controlling a trait are the same on one chromosome
as those on the opposite member of the chromosome
pair (homologous chromosomes), the plant is
homozygous and will "breed true" for that trait if
self-pollinated or crossed with an individual of
identical genotype for that trait. The traits
possessed by the homozygous parent will be
transmitted to the offspring, which will resemble
each other and the parent. If the genes on one
chromosome differ from the genes on its homologous
chromosome then the plant is termed heterozygous;
the resultant offspring may not possess the
parental traits and will most probably differ from
each other. Imported Cannabis strains usually
exhibit great seedling diversity for most traits
and many types will be discovered.
To minimize variation
in seedlings and ensure preservation of desirable
parental traits in offspring, certain careful
procedures are followed as illustrated in Chapter
III. The actual mechanisms of sexual propagation
and seed production will be thoroughly explained
here.
The Life Cycle and Sinsemilla
Cultivation
A wild Cannabis plant
grows from seed to a seedling, to a prefloral
juvenile, to either pollen- or seed-bearing adult,
following the usual pattern of development and
sexual reproduction. Fiber and drug production
both interfere with the natural cycle and block
the pathways of inheritance. Fiber crops are
usually harvested in the juvenile or prefloral
stage, before viable seed is produced, while
sinsemilla or seedless cannabis cultivation
eliminates pollination and subsequent seed
production. In the case of cultivated
Cannabiscrops, special techniques must be used to
produce viable seed for the following year without
jeopardizing the quality of the final
product.
Modern fiber or hemp
farmers use commercially produced high fiber
content strains of even maturation. Monoecious
strains are often used because they mature more
evenly than dioecious strains. The hemp breeder
sets up test plots where phenotypes can be
recorded and controlled crosses can be made. A
farmer may leave a portion of his crop to develop
mature seeds which he collects for the following
year. If a hybrid variety is grown, the offspring
will not ail resemble the parent crop and
desirable characteristics may be lost.
Growers of seeded
cannabis for smoking or hashish production collect
vast quantities of seeds that fall from the
flowers during harvesting, drying, and processing.
A mature pistillate plant can produce tens of
thousands of seeds if freely pollinated.
Sinsemilla cannabis is grown by removing all the
staminate plants from a patch, eliminating every
pollen source, and allowing the pistillate plants
to produce massive clusters of unfertilized
flowers.
Various theories have
arisen to explain the unusually potent
psychoactive properties of unfertilized Cannabis.
In general these theories have as their central
theme the extraordinarily long, frustrated
struggle of the pistillate plant to reproduce, and
many theories are both twisted and romantic. What
actually happens when a pistillate plant remains
unfertilized for its entire life and how this
ultimately affects the cannabinoid (class of
molecules found only in Cannabis) and terpene (a
class of aromatic organic compounds) levels
remains a mystery. It is assumed, how ever, that
seeding cuts the life of the plant short and THC
(tetrahydrocannabinol the major psychoactive
compound in Cannabis) does not have enough time to
accumulate. Hormonal changes associated with
seeding definitely affect all metabolic processes
within the plant including cannabinoid
biosynthesis. The exact nature of these changes is
unknown but probably involves imbalance in the
enzymatic systems controlling cannabinoid
production. Upon fertilization the plant's
energies are channeled into seed production
instead of increased resin production. Sinsemilla
plants continue to produce new floral clusters
until late fail, while seeded plants cease floral
production. It is also suspected that
capitate-stalked trichome production might cease
when the calyx is fertilized. If this is the case,
then sinsemilla may be higher in THC because of
uninterrupted floral growth, trichome formation
and cannabinoid production. What is important with
respect to propagation is that once again the
farmer has interfered with the life cycle and no
naturally fertilized seeds have been
produced.
The careful
propagator, however, can produce as many seeds of
pure types as needed for future research without
risk of pollinating the precious crop. Staminate
parents exhibiting favorable characteristics are
reproductively isolated while pollen is carefully
collected and applied to only selected flowers of
the pistillate parents.
Many cultivators
overlook the staminate plant, considering it
useless if not detrimental. But the staminate
plant contributes half of the genotype expressed
in the offspring. Not only are staminate plants
preserved for breeding, but they must be allowed
to mature, uninhibited, until their phenotypes can
be determined and the most favorable individuals
selected. Pollen may also be stored for short
periods of time for later
breeding.
Biology of Pollination
Pollination is the
event of pollen landing on a stigmatic surface
such as the pistil, and fertilization is the union
of the staminate chromosomes from the pollen with
the pistillate chromosomes from the
ovule.
Pollination begins
with dehiscence (release of pollen) from staminate
flowers. Millions of pollen grains float through
the air on light breezes, and many land on the
stigmatic surfaces of nearby pistillate plants. If
the pistil is ripe, the pollen grain will
germinate and send out a long pollen tube much as
a seed pushes out a root. The tube contains a
haploid (in) generative nucleus and grows downward
toward the ovule at the base of the pistils. When
the pollen tube reaches the ovule, the staminate
haploid nucleus fuses with the pistillate haploid
nucleus and the diploid condition is restored.
Germination of the pollen grain occurs 15 to 20
minutes after contact with the stigmatic surface
(pistil); fertilization may take up to two days in
cooler temperatures. Soon after fertilization, the
pistils wither away as the ovule and surrounding
calyx begin to swell. If the plant is properly
watered, seed will form and sexual reproduction is
complete. It is crucial that no part of the cycle
be interrupted or viable seed will not form. If
the pollen is subjected to extremes of
temperature, humidity, or moisture, it will fail
to germinate, the pollen tube will die prior to
fertilization, or the embryo will be unable to
develop into a mature seed. Techniques for
successful pollination have been designed with all
these criteria in mind.
Controlled versus Random
Pollinations
The seeds with which
most cultivators begin represent varied genotypes
even when they originate from the same floral
cluster of cannabis, and not all of these
genotypes will prove favorable. Seeds collected
from imported shipments are the result of totally
random pollinations among many genotypes. If
elimination of pollination was at tempted and only
a few seeds appear, the likelihood is very high
that these pollinations were caused by a late
flowering staminate plant or a hermaphrodite,
adversely affecting the genotype of the offspring.
Once the offspring of imported strains are in the
hands of a competent breeder, selection and
replication of favorable phenotypes by controlled
breeding may begin. Only one or two individuals
out of many may prove acceptable as parents. If
the cultivator allows random pollination to occur
again, the population not only fails to improve,
it may even degenerate through natural and
accidental selection of unfavorable traits. We
must therefore turn to techniques of controlled
pollination by which the breeder attempts to take
control and deter mine the genotype of future
offspring.
Data Collection
Keeping accurate
notes and records is a key to successful
plant-breeding. Crosses among ten pure strains
(ten staminate and ten pistillate parents) result
in ten pure and ninety hybrid crosses. It is an
endless and inefficient task to attempt to
remember the significance of each little number
and colored tag associated with each cross. The
well organized breeder will free himself from this
mental burden and possible confusion by entering
vital data about crosses, phenotypes, and growth
conditions in a system with one number
corresponding to each member of the
population.
The single most
important task in the proper collection of data is
to establish undeniable credibility. Memory fails,
and remembering the steps that might possibly have
led to the production of a favorable strain does
not constitute the data needed to reproduce that
strain. Data is always written down; memory is not
a reliable record. A record book contains a
numbered page for each plant, and each separate
cross is tagged on the pistillate parent and
recorded as follows: "seed of pistillate parent X
pollen or staminate parent." Also the date of
pollination is included and room is left for the
date of seed harvest. Samples of the parental
plants are saved as voucher specimens for later
characterization and analysis.
Pollination Techniques
Controlled hand
pollination consists of two basic steps:
collecting pollen from the anthers of the
staminate parent and applying pollen to the
receptive stigmatic surfaces of the pistillate
parent. Both steps are carefully con trolled so
that no pollen escapes to cause random
pollinations. Since Cannabisis a wind-pollinated
species, enclosures are employed which isolate the
ripe flowers from wind, eliminating pollination,
yet allowing enough light penetration and air
circulation for the pollen and seeds to develop
without suffocating. Paper and very tightly woven
cloth seem to be the most suitable materials.
Coarse cloth allows pollen to escape and plastic
materials tend to collect transpired water and rot
the flowers. Light-colored opaque or translucent
reflective materials remain cooler in the sun than
dark or transparent materials, which either absorb
solar heat directly or create a greenhouse effect,
heating the flowers inside and killing the pollen.
Pollination bags are easily constructed by gluing
together vegetable parchment (a strong breathable
paper for steaming vegetables) and clear nylon
oven bags (for observation windows) with silicon
glue. Breathable synthetic fabrics such as
Gore-Tex are used with great success. Seed
production requires both successful pollination
and fertilization, so the conditions inside the
enclosures must remain suitable for pollen-tube
growth and fertilization. It is most convenient
and effective to use the same enclosure to collect
pollen and apply it, reducing contamination during
pollen transfer. Controlled "free" pollinations
may also be made if only one pollen parent is
allowed to remain in an isolated area of the field
and no pollinations are caused by hermaphrodites
or late-maturing staminate plants. If the selected
staminate parent drops pollen when there are only
a few primordial flowers on the pistillate seed
parent, then only a few seeds will form in the
basal flowers and the rest of the flower cluster
will be seedless. Early fertilization might also
help fix the sex of the pistillate plant, helping
to prevent hermaphrodism. Later, hand pollinations
can be performed on the same pistillate parent by
removing the early seeds from each limb to be
re-pollinated, so avoiding confusion.
Hermaphrodite or monoecious plants may be isolated
from the remainder of the population and allowed
to freely self-pollinate if pure-breeding
offspring are desired to preserve a selected
trait. Selfed hermaphrodites usually give rise to
hermaphrodite offspring.
Pollen may be
collected in several ways. If the propagator has
an isolated area where staminate plants can grow
separate from each other to avoid mutual
contamination and can be allowed to shed pollen
without endangering the remainder of the
population, then direct collection may be used. A
small vial, glass plate, or mirror is held beneath
a recently-opened staminate flower which appears
to be releasing pollen, and the pollen is
dislodged by tap ping the anthers. Pollen may also
be collected by placing whole limbs or clusters of
staminate flowers on a piece of paper or glass and
allowing them to dry in a cool, still place.
Pollen will drop from some of the anthers as they
dry, and this may be scraped up and stored for a
short time in a cool, dark, dry spot. A simple
method is to place the open pollen vial or folded
paper in a larger sealable container with a dozen
or more fresh, dry soda crackers or a cup of dry
white rice. The sealed container is stored in the
refrigerator and the dry crackers or rice act as a
desiccant, absorbing moisture from the
pollen.
Any breeze may
interfere with collection and cause contamination
with pollen from neighboring plants. Early morning
is the best time to collect pollen, as it has not
been exposed to the heat of the day. All equipment
used for collection, including hands, must be
cleaned before continuing to the next pollen
source. This ensures protection of each pollen
sample from contamination with pollen from
different plants.
Staminate flowers
will often open several hours before the onset of
pollen release. If flowers are collected at this
time they can be placed in a covered bottle where
they will open and release pollen within two days.
A carefully sealed paper cover allows air
circulation, facilitates the release of pollen,
and prevents mold.
Both of the
previously described methods of pollen collection
are susceptible to gusts of wind, which may cause
contamination problems if the staminate pollen
plants grow at all close to the remaining
pistillate plants. There fore, a method has been
designed so that controlled pollen collection and
application can be performed in the same area
without the need to move staminate plants from
their original location. Besides the advantages of
convenience, the pollen parents mature under the
same conditions as the seed parents, thus more
accurately expressing their phenotypes.
The first step in
collecting pollen is, of course, the selection of
a staminate or pollen parent. Healthy individuals
with well-developed clusters of flowers are
chosen. The appearance of the first staminate
primordia or male sex signs often brings a feeling
of panic ("stamenoia") to the cultivator of
seedless Cannabis, and potential pollen parents
are prematurely removed. Staminate primordia need
to develop from one to five weeks before the
flowers open and pollen is released. During this
period the selected pollen plants are carefully
watched, daily or hourly if necessary, for
developmental rates vary greatly and pollen may be
released quite early in some strains. The
remaining staminate plants that are unsuitable for
breeding are destroyed and the pollen plants
specially labeled to avoid confusion and extra
work.
As the first flowers
begin to swell, they are removed prior to pollen
release and destroyed. Tossing them on the ground
is ineffective because they may release pollen as
they dry. When the staminate plant enters its full
floral condition and more ripe flowers appear than
can be easily controlled, limbs with the most ripe
flowers are chosen. It is usually safest to
collect pollen from two limbs for each intended
cross, in case one fails to develop. If there are
ten prospective seed parents, pollen from twenty
limbs on the pollen parent is collected. In this
case, the twenty most flowered limb tips are
selected and all the remaining flowering clusters
on the plant are removed to prevent stray
pollinations. Large leaves are left on the
remainder of the plant but are removed at the limb
tips to minimize condensation of water vapor
released inside the enclosure. The portions
removed from the pollen parent are saved for later
analysis and phenotype
characterization.
The pollination
enclosures are secured and the plant is checked
for any shoots where flowers might develop outside
the enclosure. The completely open enclosure is
slipped over the limb tip and secured with a tight
but stretchable seal such as a rubber band,
elastic, or plastic plant tie-tape to ensure a
tight seal and prevent crushing of the vascular
tissues of the stem. String and wire are avoided.
If enclosures are tied to weak limbs they may be
supported; the bags will also remain cooler if
they are shaded. Hands are always washed before
and after handling each pollen sample to prevent
accidental pollen transfer and
contamination.
Enclosures for
collecting and applying pollen and preventing
stray pollination are simple in design and
construction. Paper bags make convenient
enclosures. Long narrow bags such as light-gauge
quart-bottle bags, giant popcorn bags or bakery
bags provide a convenient shape for covering the
limb tip. The thinner the paper used the more air
circulation is allowed, and the better the flowers
will develop. Very thick paper or plastic bags are
never used. Most available bags are made with
water soluble glue and may come apart after rain
or watering. All seams are sealed with waterproof
tape or silicon glue and the bags should not be
handled when wet since they tear easily. Bags of
Gore-Tex cloth or vegetable parchment will not
tear when wet. Paper bags make labeling easy and
each bag is marked in waterproof ink with the
number of the individual pollen parent, the date
and time the enclosure was secured, and any useful
notes. Room is left to add the date of pollen
collection and necessary information about the
future seed parent it will pollinate.
Pollen release is
fairly rapid inside the bags, and after two days
to a week the limbs may be removed and dried in a
cool dark place, unless the bags are placed too
early or the pollen parent develops very slowly.
To inspect the progress of pollen release, a
flashlight is held behind the bag at night and the
silhouettes of the opening flowers are easily
seen. In some cases, clear nylon windows are in
stalled with silicon glue for greater visibility.
When flowering is at its peak and many flowers
have just opened, collection is completed, and the
limb, with its bag attached, is cut. If the limb
is cut too early, the flowers will not have shed
any pollen; if the bag remains on the plant too
long, most of the pollen will be dropped inside
the bag where heat and moisture will destroy it.
When flowering is at its peak, millions of pollen
grains are released and many more flowers will
open after the limbs are collected. The bags are
collected early in the morning before the sun has
time to heat them up. The bags and their contents
are dried in a cool dark place to avoid mold and
pollen spoilage. If pollen becomes moist, it will
germinate and spoil, therefore dry storage is
imperative.
After the staminate
limbs have dried and pollen re lease has stopped,
the bags are shaken vigorously, allowed to settle,
and carefully untied. The limbs and loose flowers
are removed, since they are a source of moisture
that could promote mold growth, and the pollen
bags are re sealed. The bags may be stored as they
are until the seed parent is ready for
pollination, or the pollen may be re moved and
stored in cool, dry, dark vials for later use and
hand application. Before storing pollen, any other
plant parts present are removed with a screen. A
piece of fuel filter screening placed across the
top of a mason jar works well, as does a fine-mesh
tea strainer.
Now a pistillate
plant is chosen as the seed parent. A pistillate
flower cluster is ripe for fertilization so long
as pale, slender pistils emerge from the calyxes.
Withered, dark pistils protruding from swollen,
resin encrusted calyxes are a sign that the
reproductive peak has long passed. Cannabis plants
can be successfully pollinated as soon as the
first primordia show pistils and until just before
harvest, but the largest yield of uniform, healthy
seeds is achieved by pollinating in the peak
floral stage. At this time, the seed plant is
covered with thick clusters of white pistils. Few
pistils are brown and withered, and resin
production has just begun. This is the most
receptive time for fertilization, still early in
the seed plant's life, with plenty of time
remaining for the seeds to mature. Healthy, well
flowered lower limbs on the shaded side of the
plant are selected. Shaded buds will not heat up
in the bags as much as buds in the hot sun, and
this will help protect the sensitive pistils. When
possible, two terminal clusters of pistillate
flowers are chosen for each pollen bag. In this
way, with two pollen bags for each seed parent and
two clusters of pistillate flowers for each bag,
there are four opportunities to perform the cross
successfully. Remember that production of viable
seed requires successful pollination,
fertilization and embryo development. Since
interfering with any part of this cycle precludes
seed development, fertilization failure is guarded
against by duplicating all steps.
Before the pollen
bags are used, the seed parent information is
added to the pollen parent data. Included is the
number of the seed parent, the date of
pollination, and any comments about the phenotypes
of both parents. Also, for each of the selected
pistillate clusters, a tag containing the same
information is made and secured to the limb below
the closure of the bag. A warm, windless evening
is chosen for pollination so the pollen tube has
time to grow before sunrise. After removing most
of the shade leaves from the tips of the limbs to
be pollinated, the pollen is tapped away from the
mouth of the bag. The bag is then carefully opened
and slipped over two inverted limb tips, taking
care not to release any pollen, and tied securely
with an expandable band. The bag is shaken
vigorously, so the pollen will be evenly dispersed
throughout the bag, facilitating complete
pollination. Fresh bags are sometimes used, either
charged with pollen prior to being placed over the
limb tip, or injected with pollen, using a large
syringe or atomizer, after the bag is placed.
However, the risk of accidental pollination with
injection is higher.
If only a small
quantity of pollen is available it may be used
more sparingly by diluting with a neutral powder
such as flour before it is used. When pure pollen
is used, many pollen grains may land on each
pistil when only one is needed for fertilization.
Diluted pollen will go further and still produce
high fertilization rates. Diluting 1 part pollen
with 10 to 100 parts flour is common. Powdered
fungicides can also be used since this helps
retard the growth of molds in the maturing,
seeded, floral clusters.
The bags may remain
on the seed parent for sometime; seeds usually
begin to develop within a few days, buttheir
development will be retarded by the bags. The
propagator waits three full sunny days, then
carefully removes and sterilizes or destroys the
bags. This way there is little chance of stray
pollination. Any viable pollen that failed to
pollinate the seed parent will germinate in the
warm moist bag and die within three days, along
with many of the unpollinated pistils. In
particularly cool or overcast conditions a week
may be necessary, but the bag is removed at the
earliest safe time to ensure proper seed
development without stray pollinations. As soon as
the bag is removed, the calyxes begin to swell
with seed, indicating successful fertilization.
Seed parents then need good irrigation or
development will be retarded, resulting in small,
immature, and nonviable seeds. Seeds develop
fastest in
warm weather and take
usually from two to four weeks to mature
completely. In cold weather seeds may take up to
two months to mature. If seeds get wet in fall
rains, they may sprout. Seeds are removed when the
calyx begins to dry up and the dark shiny perianth
(seed coat) can be seen protruding from the drying
calyx. Seeds are labeled and stored in a cool,
dark, dry place, This is the method employed by
breeders to create seeds of known parentage used
to study and improve Cannabis
genetics.
Seed Selection
Nearly every
cultivated Cannabis plant, no matter what its
future, began as a germinating seed; and nearly
all Cannabis cultivators, no matter what their
intention, start with seeds that are gifts from a
fellow cultivator or extracted from imported
shipments of cannabis. Very little true control
can be exercised in seed selection unless the
cultivator travels to select growing plants with
favorable characteristics and personally pollinate
them. This is not possible for most cultivators or
researchers and they usually rely on imported
seeds. These seeds are of unknown parentage, the
product of natural selection or of breeding by the
original farmer, Certain basic problems affect the
genetic purity and predictability of collected
seed.
1 - If a Cannabis
sample is heavily seeded, then the majority of the
male plants were allowed to mature and release
pollen, Since Cannabis is wind-pollinated, many
pollen parents (including early and late maturing
staminate and hermaphrodite plants) will
contribute to the seeds in any batch of pistillate
flowers. If the seeds are all taken from one
flower cluster with favorable characteristics,
then at least the pistillate or seed parent is the
same for all those seeds, though the pollen may
have come from many different parents. This
creates great diversity in offspring.
2 - In very lightly
seeded or nearly sinsemilla Cannabis, pollination
has largely been prevented by the removal of
staminate parents prior to the release of pollen.
The few seeds that do form often result from
pollen from hermaphrodite plants that went
undetected by the farmer, or by random wind-borne
pollen from wild plants or a nearby field.
Hermaphrodite parents often produce hermaphrodite
offspring and this may not be
desirable.
3 - Most domestic
Cannabis strains are random hybrids. This is the
result of limited selection of pollen parents,
impure breeding conditions, and lack of adequate
space to isolate pollen parents from the remainder
of the crop.
When selecting seeds,
the propagator will frequently look for seed
plants that have been carefully bred locally by
another propagator. Even if they are hybrids there
is a better chance of success than with imported
seeds, pro vided certain guidelines are
followed:
1 - The dried seeded
flower clusters are free of staminate flowers that
might have caused hermaphrodite
pollinations.
2 - The flowering
clusters are tested for desirable traits and seeds
selected from the best.
3 - Healthy, robust
seeds are selected. Large, dark seeds are best;
smaller, paler seeds are avoided since these are
usually less mature and less viable.
4 - If accurate
information is not available about the pollen
parent, then selection proceeds on common sense
and luck. Mature seeds with dried calyxes in the
basal portions of the floral clusters along the
main stems occur in the earliest pistillate
flowers to appear and must have been pollinated by
early-maturing pollen parents. These seeds have a
high chance of producing early-maturing offspring.
By contrast, mature seeds selected from the tips
of floral clusters, often surrounded by immature
seeds, are formed in later-appearing pistillate
flowers. These flowers were likely pollinated by
later-maturing staminate or hermaphrodite pollen
parents, and their seeds should mature later and
have a greater chance of producing hermaphrodite
off spring. The pollen parent also exerts some
influence on the appearance of the resulting seed.
If seeds are collected from the same part of a
flower cluster and selected for similar size,
shape, color, and perianth patterns, then it is
more likely that the pollinations represent fewer
different gene pools and will produce more uniform
offspring.
5 - Seeds are
collected from strains that best suit the
locality; these usually come from similar climates
and latitudes. Seed selection for specific traits
is discussed in detail in Chapter III.
6 - Pure strain seeds
are selected from crosses between parents of the
same origin.
7 - Hybrid seeds are
selected from crosses between pure strain parents
of different origins.
8 - Seeds from hybrid
plants, or seeds resulting from pollination by
hybrid plants, are avoided, since these will not
reliably reproduce the phenotype of either
parent.
Seed stocks are
graded by the amount of control exerted by the
collector in selecting the parents. Grade #1 -
Seed parent and pollen parent are known and there
is absolutely no possibility that the seeds
resulted from pollen contamination.
Grade #2 - Seed
parent is known but several known staminate or
hermaphrodite pollen parents are involved. Grade
#3 - Pistillate parent is known and pollen parents
are unknown.
Grade #4 - Neither
parent is known, but the seeds are collected from
one floral cluster, so the pistillate seed parent
age traits may be characterized.
Grade #5 - Parentage
is unknown but origin is certain, such as seeds
collected from the bottom of a bag of imported
Cannabis.
Grade #6 - Parentage
and origin are unknown.
Asexual Propagation
Asexual propagation
(cloning) allows the preservation of genotype
because only normal cell division (mitosis) occurs
during growth and regeneration. The vegetative
(non-reproductive) tissue of Cannabis has 10 pairs
of chromosomes in the nucleus of each cell. This
is known as the diploid (2n) condition where 2n =
20 chromosomes. During mitosis every chromosome
pair replicates and one of the two identical sets
of chromosome pairs migrates to each daughter
cell, which now has a genotype identical to the
mother cell. Consequently, every vegetative cell
in a Cannabis plant has the same genotype and a
plant resulting from asexual propagation will have
the same genotype as the mother plant and will,
for all practical purposes, develop identically
under the same environmental
conditions.
In Cannabis, mitosis
takes place in the shoot apex (meristem), root tip
meristems, and the meristematic cambium layer of
the stalk. A propagator makes use of these
meristematic areas to produce clones that will
grow and be multiplied. Asexual propagation
techniques such as cuttage, layerage, and division
of roots can ensure identical populations as large
as the growth and development of the parental
material will permit. Clones can be produced from
even a single cell, because every cell of the
plant possesses the genetic information necessary
to regenerate a complete plant.
Asexual propagation
produces clones which perpetuate the unique
characteristics of the parent plant. Because of
the heterozygous nature of Cannabis, valuable
traits may be lost by sexual propagation that can
be preserved and multiplied by cloning.
Propagation of nearly identical populations of
all-pistillate, fast growing, evenly maturing
Cannabis is made possible through cloning. Any
agricultural or environmental influences will
affect all the members of that clone
equally.
The concept of clone
does not mean that all members of the clone will
necessarily appear identical in all
characteristics. The phenotype that we observe in
an individual is influenced by its surroundings.
Therefore, members of the clone will develop
differently under varying environmental
conditions. These influences do not affect
genotype and therefore are not permanent. Cloning
theoretically can pre serve a genotype forever.
Vigor may slowly decline due to poor selection of
clone material or the constant pressure of disease
or environmental stress, but this trend will re
verse if the pressures are removed. Shifts in
genetic composition occasionally occur during
selection for vigorous growth. However, if
parental strains are maintained by in frequent
cloning this is less likely. Only mutation of a
gene in a vegetative cell that then divides and
passes on the mutated gene will permanently affect
the genotype of the clone. If this mutated portion
is cloned or reproduced sexually, the mutant
genotype will be further replicated. Mutations in
clones usually affect dominance relations and are
therefore noticed immediately. Mutations may be
induced artificially (but without much
predictability) by treating meristematic regions
with X-rays, colchicine, or other
mutagens.
The genetic
uniformity provided by clones offers a control for
experiments designed to quantify the subtle
effects of environment and cultural techniques.
These subtleties are usually obscured by the
extreme diversity resulting from sexual
propagation. However, clonal uniformity can also
invite serious problems. If a population of clones
is subjected to sudden environmental stress,
pests, or disease for which it has no defense,
every member of the clone is sure to be affected
and the entire population may be lost. Since no
genetic diversity is found within the clone, no
adaptation to new stresses can occur through
recombination of genes as in a sexually propagated
population.
In propagation by
cuttage or layerage it is only necessary for a new
root system to form, since the meristematic shoot
apex comes directly from the parental plant. Many
stem cells, even in mature plants, have the
capability of producing adventitious roots. In
fact, every vegetative cell in the plant contains
the genetic information needed for an entire
plant. Adventitious roots appear spontaneously
from stems and old roots as opposed to systemic
roots which appear along the developing root
system originating in the embryo. In humid
conditions (as in the tropics or a green house)
adventitious roots occur naturally along the main
stalk near the ground and along limbs where they
droop and touch the ground.
Rooting
A knowledge of the
internal structure of the stem is helpful in
understanding the origin of adventitious
roots.
The development of
adventitious roots can be broken down into three
stages: (1) the initiation of meristematic cells
located just outside and between the vascular
bundles (the root initials), (2) the
differentiation of these meristematic cells into
root primordia, and (3) the emergence and growth
of new roots by rupturing old stem tissue and
establishing vascular connections with the
shoot.
As the root initials
divide, the groups of cells take on the appearance
of a small root tip. A vascular system forms with
the adjacent vascular bundles and the root
continues to grow outward through the cortex until
the tip emerges from the epidermis of the stem.
Initiation of root growth usually begins within a
week and young roots appear within four weeks.
Often an irregular mass of white cells, termed
callus tissue, will form on the surface of the
stem adjacent to the areas of root initiation.
This tissue has no influence on root formation.
However, it is a form of regenerative tissue and
is a sign that conditions are favorable for root
initiation.
The physiological
basis for root initiation is well understood and
allows many advantageous modifications of rooting
systems. Natural plant growth substances such as
auxins, cytokinins, and gibberellins are certainly
responsible for the control of root initiation and
the rate of root formation. Auxins are considered
the most influential. Auxins and other growth
substances are involved in the control of
virtually all plant processes: stem growth, root
formation, lateral bud inhibition, floral
maturation, fruit development, and determination
of sex. Great care is exercised in application of
artificial growth substances so that detrimental
conflicting reactions in addition to rooting do
not occur. Auxins seem to affect most related
plant species in the same way, but the mechanism
of this action is not yet fully
understood.
Many synthetic
compounds have been shown to have auxin activity
and are commercially available, such as
napthaleneacetic acid (NAA), indolebutyric acid
(IBA), and 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4
DPA), but only indoleacetic acid has been isolated
from plants. Naturally occurring auxin is formed
mainly in the apical shoot men stem and young
leaves. It moves downward after its formation at
the growing shoot tip, but massive concentrations
of auxins in rooting solutions will force travel
up the vascular tissue. Knowledge of the
physiology of auxins has led to practical
applications in rooting cuttings. It was shown
originally by Went and later by Thimann and Went
that auxins promote adventitious root formation in
stem cuttings. Since application of natural or
synthetic auxin seems to stimulate adventitious
root formation in many plants, it is assumed that
auxin levels are associated with the formation of
root initials. Further research by Warmke and
Warmke (1950) suggested that the levels of auxin
may determine whether adventitious roots or shoots
are formed, with high auxin levels promoting root
growth and low levels favoring shoots.
Cytokinins are
chemical compounds that stimulate cell growth. In
stem cuttings, cytokinins suppress root growth and
stimulate bud growth. This is the opposite of the
reaction caused by auxins, suggesting that a
natural balance of the two may be responsible for
regulating nor mal plant growth. Skoog discusses
the use of solutions of equal concentrations of
auxins and cytokinins to pro mote the growth of
undifferentiated callus tissues. This may provide
a handy source of undifferentiated material for
cellular cloning.
Although Cannabis
cuttings and layers root easily, variations in
rootability exist and old stems may resist
rooting. Selection of rooting material is highly
important. Young, firm, vegetative shoots, 3 to 7
millimeters (1/8 to ? inch) in diameter, root most
easily. Weak, unhealthy plants are avoided, along
with large woody branches and reproductive
tissues, since these are slower to root. Stems of
high carbohydrate content root most easily.
Firmness is a sign of high carbohydrate levels in
stems but may be con fused with older woody
tissue. An accurate method of determining the
carbohydrate content of cuttings is the iodine
starch test. The freshly cut ends of a bundle of
cuttings are immersed in a weak solution of iodine
in potassium iodide. Cuttings containing the
highest starch content stain the darkest; the
samples are rinsed and sorted accordingly. High
nitrogen content cuttings seem to root more poorly
than cuttings with medium to low nitrogen content.
Therefore, young, rapidly-growing stems of high
nitrogen and low carbohydrate content root less
well than slightly older cuttings. For rooting,
sections are selected that have ceased elongating
and are beginning radial growth. Staminate plants
have higher average levels of carbohydrates than
pistillate plants, while pistillate plants exhibit
higher nitrogen levels. It is unknown whether sex
influences rooting, but cuttings from vegetative
tissue are taken just after sex determination
while stems are still young. For rooting cloning
stock or parental plants, the favorable balance
(low nitrogen-to-high carbohydrate) is achieved in
several ways:
1 - Reduction of the
nitrogen supply will slow shoot growth and allow
time for carbohydrates to accumulate. This can be
accomplished by leaching (rinsing the soil with
large amounts of fresh water), withholding
nitrogenous fertilizer, and allowing stock plants
to grow in full sun light. Crowding of roots
reduces excessive vegetative growth and allows for
carbohydrate accumulation.
2 - Portions of the
plant that are most likely to root are selected.
Lower branches that have ceased lateral growth and
begun to accumulate starch are the best. The
carbohydrate-to-nitrogen ratio rises as you move
away from the tip of the limb, so cuttings are not
made too short.
3 - Etiolation is the
growth of stem tissue in total darkness to
increase the possibility of root initiation.
Starch levels drop, strengthening tissues and
fibers begin to soften, cell wall thickness
decreases, vascular tissue is diminished, auxin
levels rise, and undifferentiated tissue begins to
form. These conditions are very conducive to the
initiation of root growth. If the light cycle can
be con trolled, whole plants can be subjected to
etiolation, but usually single limbs are selected
for cloning and wrapped for several inches just
above the area where the cutting will be taken.
This is done two weeks prior to rooting. The
etiolated end may then be unwrapped and inserted
into the rooting medium. Various methods of layers
and cuttings rooted below soil level rely in part
on the effects of etiolation.
4 - Girdling a stem
by cutting the phloem with a knife or crushing it
with a twisted wire may block the downward
mobility of carbohydrates and auxin and rooting
cofactors, raising the concentration of these
valuable components of root initiation above the
girdle.
Making Cuttings
Cuttings of
relatively young vegetative limbs 10 to 45
centimeters (4 to 18 inches) are made with a sharp
knife or razor blade and immediately placed in a
container of clean, pure water so the cut ends are
well covered. It is essential that the cuttings be
placed in water as soon as they are removed or a
bubble of air (embolism) may enter the cut end and
block the transpiration stream in the cutting,
causing it to wilt. Cuttings made under water
avoid the possibility of an embolism. If cuttings
are exposed to the air they are cut again before
being inserted into the rooting medium.
The medium should be
warm and moist before cut tings are removed from
the parental plant. Rows of holes are made in the
rooting medium with a tapered stick, slightly
larger in diameter than the cutting, leaving at
least 10 centimeters (4 inches) between each hole.
The cuttings are removed from the water, the end
to be rooted treated with growth regulators and
fungicides (such as Rootone F or Hormex), and each
cutting placed in its hole. The cut end of the
shoot is kept at least 10 centimeters (4 inches)
from the bottom of the medium. The rooting medium
is lightly tamped around the cutting, taking care
not to scrape off the growth regulators. During
the first few days the cuttings are checked
frequently to make sure every thing is working
properly. The cuttings are then watered with a
mild nutrient solution once a
day.
Hardening-off
The cuttings usually
develop a good root system and will be ready to
transplant in three to six weeks. At this time the
hardening-off process begins, preparing the
delicate cuttings for a life in bright sunshine.
The cuttings are removed and transplanted to a
sheltered spot such as a greenhouse until they
begin to grow on their own. It is necessary to
water them with a dilute nutrient solution or feed
with finished compost as soon as the hardening-off
process begins. Young roots are very tender and
great care is necessary to avoid damage. When
vegetative cuttings are placed outside under the
prevailing photoperiod they will react
accordingly. If it is not the proper time of the
year for the cuttings to grow and mature properly
(near harvest time, for example) or if it is too
cold for them to be put out, then they may be kept
in a vegetative condition by supplementing their
light to increase daylength. Alternatively they
may be induced to flower indoors under artificial
conditions.
After shoots are
selected and prepared for cloning, they are
treated and placed in the rooting medium. Since
the discovery in 1984 that auxins such as IAA
stimulate the production of adventitious roots,
and the subsequent discovery that the application
of synthetic auxins such as NAA increase the rate
of root production, many new techniques of
treatment have appeared. It has been found that
mixtures of growth regulators are often more
effective than one alone. IAA and NAA a?e often
combined with a small percentage of certain
phenoxy compounds and fungicides in commercial
preparations. Many growth regulators deteriorate
rapidly, and fresh solutions are made up as
needed. Treatments with vitamin B1 (thiamine) seem
to help roots grow, but no inductive effect has
been noticed. As soon as roots emerge, nutrients
are necessary; the shoot cannot maintain growth
for long on its own reserves. A complete
complement of nutrients in the rooting medium
certainly helps root growth; nitrogen is
especially beneficial. Cuttings are extremely
susceptible to fungus attack, and conditions
conducive to rooting are also favorable to the
growth of fungus. "Cap tan " is a long-lasting
fungicide that is sometimes applied in powdered
form along with growth regulators. This is done by
rolling the basal end of the cutting in the powder
before placing it in the rooting
medium.
Oxygen and Rooting
The initiation and
growth of roots depends upon atmospheric oxygen.
If oxygen levels are low, shoots may fail to
produce roots and rooting will certainly be
inhibited. It is very important to select a light,
well-aerated rooting medium. In addition to
natural aeration from the atmosphere, rooting
media may be enriched with oxygen (02) gas;
enriched rooting solutions have been shown to
increase rooting in many plant species. No
threshold for damage by excess oxygenation has
been determined, although excessive oxygenation
could displace carbon dioxide which is also vital
for proper root initiation and growth. If oxygen
levels are low, roots will form only near the
surface of the medium, whereas with adequate
oxygen levels, roots will tend to form along the
entire length of the implanted shoot, especially
at the cut end.
Oxygen enrichment of
rooting media is fairly simple. Since shoot
cuttings must be constantly wetted to ensure
proper rooting, aeration of the rooting media may
be facilitated by aerating the water used in
irrigation. Mist systems achieve this
automatically because they deliver a fine mist
(high in dissolved oxygen) to the leaves, from
where much of it runs off into the soil, aiding
rooting. Oxygen enrichment of irrigation water is
accomplished by installing an aerator in the main
water line so that atmospheric oxygen can be
absorbed by the water. An increase in dissolved
oxygen of only 20 parts per million may have a
great influence on rooting. Aeration is a
convenient way to add oxygen to water as it also
adds carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. Air from
a small pump or bottled oxygen may also be
supplied directly to the rooting media through
tiny tubes with pin holes, or through a porous
stone such as those used to aerate
aquariums.
Rooting Media
Water is a common
medium for rooting. It is inexpensive, disperses
nutrients evenly, and allows direct observation of
root development. However, several problems arise.
A water medium allows light to reach the submerged
stem, delaying etiolation and slowing root growth.
Water also promotes the growth of water molds and
other fungi, sup ports the cutting poorly, and
restricts air circulation to the young roots. In a
well aerated solution, roots will appear in great
profusion at the base of the stem, while in a
poorly aerated or stagnant solution only a few
roots will form at the surface, where direct
oxygen exchange occurs. If rootings are made in
pure water, the solution might be replaced
regularly with tap water, which should contain
sufficient oxygen for a short period. If nutrient
solutions are used, a system is needed to
oxygenate the solution. The nutrient solution does
become concentrated by evaporation, and this is
watched. Pure water is used to dilute rooting
solutions and refill rooting
containers.
Soil Treatment
Solid media provide
anchors for cuttings, plenty of darkness to
promote etiolation and root growth, and sufficient
air circulation to the young roots. A high-quality
soil with good drainage such as that used for seed
germination is often used but the soil must be
carefully sterilized to prevent the growth of
harmful bacteria and fungus. A small amount of
soil can easily be sterilized by spreading it out
on a cookie sheet and heating it in an oven set at
"low," approximately 820 C (180~ F), for thirty
minutes. This kills most harmful bacteria and
fungus as well as nematodes, in sects and most
weed seeds. Overheating the soil will cause the
breakdown of nutrients and organic complexes and
the formation of toxic compounds. Large amounts of
soil may be treated by chemical fumigants.
Chemical fumigation avoids the breakdown of
organic material by heat and may result in a
better rooting mix. Formaldehyde is an excellent
fungicide and kills some weed seeds, nematodes,
and in sects. One gallon of commercial formalin
(40% strength) is mixed with 50 gallons of water
and slowly applied until each cubic foot of soil
absorbs 2-4 quarts of solution. Small containers
are sealed with plastic bags; large flats and
plots are covered with polyethylene sheets. After
24 hours the seal is removed and the soil is
allowed to dry for two weeks or until the odor of
formaldehyde is no longer present. The treated
soil is drenched with water prior to use.
Fumigants such as formaldehyde, methyl bromide or
other lethal gases are very dangerous and
cultivators use them only outside with appropriate
protection for themselves.
It is usually much
simpler and safer to use an artificial sterile
medium for rooting. Vermiculite and perlite are
often used in propagation because of their
excellent drain age and neutral pH (a balance
between acidity and alkalinity). No sterilization
is needed because both products are manufactured
at high heat and contain no organic material. It
has been found that a mixture of equal portions of
medium and large grade vermiculite or perlite
promotes the greatest root growth. This results
from increased air circulation around the larger
pieces. A weak nutrient solution, including
micro-nutrients, is needed to wet the medium,
because little or no nutrient material is supplied
by these artificial media. Solutions are checked
for pH and corrected to neutral with agricultural
lime, dolomite lime, or oyster shell
lime.
Layering
Layering is a process
in which roots develop on a stem while it remains
attached to, and nutritionally sup ported by the
parent plant. The stem is then detached and the
meristematic tip becomes a new individual, growing
on its own roots, termed a layer. Layering differs
from cutting because rooting occurs while the
shoot is still attached to the parent. Rooting is
initiated in layering by various stem treatments
which interrupt the downward flow of
photosynthates (products of photosynthesis) from
the shoot tip. This causes the accumulation of
auxins, carbohydrates and other growth factors.
Rooting occurs in this treated area even though
the layer remains attached to the parent. Water
and mineral nutrients are supplied by the parent
plant because only the phloem has been
interrupted; the xylem tissues connecting the
shoot to the parental roots remain intact (see
illus. 1, page 29). In this manner, the propagator
can overcome the problem of keeping a severed
cutting alive while it roots, thus greatly in
creasing the chances of success. Old woody
reproductive stems that, as cuttings, would dry up
and die, may be rooted by layering. Layering can
be very time-consuming and is less practical for
mass cloning of parental stock than removing and
rooting dozens of cuttings. Layering, however,
does give the small-scale propagator a
high-success alternative which also requires less
equipment than cuttings.
Techniques of
Layering
Almost all layering
techniques rely on the principle of etiolation.
Both soil layering and air layering involve
depriving the rooting portion of the stem of
light, promoting rooting. Root-promoting
substances and fungicides prove beneficial, and
they are usually applied as a spray or powder.
Root formation on layers depends on constant
moisture, good air circulation and moderate
temperatures at the site of
rooting.
Soil Layering
Soil layering may be
performed in several ways. The most common is
known as tip layering. A long, supple vegetative
lower limb is selected for layering, carefully
bent so it touches the ground, and stripped of
leaves and small shoots where the rooting is to
take place. A narrow trench, 6 inches to a foot
long and 2 to 4 inches deep, is dug parallel to
the limb, which is placed along the bottom of the
trench, secured with wire or wooden stakes, and
buried with a small mound of soil. The buried
section of stem may be girdled by cutting, crushed
with a loop of wire, or twisted to disrupt the
phloem tissue and cause the accumulation of
substances which promote rooting. It may also be
treated with growth regulators at this
time.
Serpentine layering
may be used to create multiple layers along one
long limb. Several stripped sections of the limb
are buried in separate trenches, making sure that
at least one node remains above ground between
each set of roots to allow shoots to develop. The
soil surrounding the stem is kept moist at all
times and may require wetting several times a day.
A small stone or stick is inserted under each
exposed section of stem to prevent the lateral
shoot buds rotting from constant contact with the
moist soil surface. Tip layers and serpentine
layers may be started in small containers placed
near the parental plant. Rooting usually begins
within two weeks, and layers may be re moved with
a sharp razor or clippers after four to six weeks.
If the roots have become well established,
transplanting may be difficult without damaging
the tender root system. Shoots on layers continue
to grow under the same conditions as the parent,
and less time is needed for the clone to
acclimatize or harden-off and begin to grow on its
own than with cuttings.
In air layering,
roots form on the aerial portions of stems that
have been girdled, treated with growth regulators,
and wrapped with moist rooting media. Air layering
is an ancient form of propagation, possibly
invented by the Chinese. The ancient technique of
goo tee uses a ball of clay or soil plastered
around a girdled stem and held with a wrap of
fibers. Above this is suspended a small container
of water (such as a bamboo section) with a wick to
the wrapped gootee; this way the gootee remains
moist.
The single most
difficult problem with air layers is the tendency
for them to dry out quickly. Relatively small
amounts of rooting media are used, and the
position on aerial parts of the plant exposes them
to drying winds and sun. Many wraps have been
tried, but the best seems to be clear polyethylene
plastic sheeting which allows oxygen to enter and
retains moisture well. Air layers are easiest to
make in greenhouses where humidity is high, but
they may also be used outside as long as they are
kept moist and don?t freeze. Air layers are most
useful to the amateur propagator and breeder
because they take up little space and allow the
efficient cloning of many
individuals.
Making an Air Layer
A recently sexed
young limb 3-10 mm (1/8 to 3/8 inch) in diameter
is selected. The site of the layer is usually a
spot 30 centimeters (12 inches) or more from the
limb tip. Unless the stem is particularly strong
and woody, it is splinted by positioning a 30
centimeter (12 inch) stick of approximately the
same diameter as the stem to be layered along the
bottom edge of the stem. This splint is tied in
place at both ends with a piece of elastic
plant-tie tape. This enables the propagator to
handle the stem more confidently. An old, dry
Cannabis stem works well as a splint. Next, the
stem is girdled between the two ties with a twist
of wire or a diagonal cut. After girdling, the
stem is sprayed or dusted with a fungicide and
growth regulator, surrounded with one or two
handfuls of unmilled sphagnum moss, and wrapped
tightly with a small sheet of clear polyethylene
film (4-6 mil). The film is tied securely at each
end, tightly enough to make a waterproof seal but
not so tight that the phloem tissues are crushed.
If the phloem is crushed, compounds necessary for
rooting will accumulate outside of the medium and
rooting will be slowed. Plastic florist's tape or
electrician's tape works well for sealing air
layers. Although polyethylene film retains
moisture well, the moss will dry out eventually
and must be remoistened periodically. Unwrapping
each layer is impractical and would disturb the
roots, so a hypodermic syringe is used to inject
water, nutrients, fungicides, and growth
regulators. If the layers become too wet the limb
rots. Layers are checked regularly by injecting
water until it squirts out and then very lightly
squeezing the medium to remove any extra water.
Heavy layers on thin limbs are supported by tying
them to a large adjacent limb or a small stick
anchored in the ground. Rooting begins within two
weeks and roots will be visible through the clear
plastic within four weeks. When the roots appear
adequately developed, the layer is removed,
carefully unwrapped, and transplanted with the
moss and the splint intact. The layer is watered
well and placed in a shady spot for a few days to
allow the plant to harden-off and adjust to living
on its own root system. It is then placed in the
open. In hot weather, large leaves are removed
from the shoot before removing the layer to
prevent excessive transpiration and
wilting.
Layers develop
fastest just after sexual differentiation. Many
layers may be made of staminate plants in order to
save small samples of them for pollen collection
and to conserve space. By the time the pollen
parents begin to flower profusely, the layers will
be rooted and may be cut and removed to an
isolated area. Layers taken from pistil late
plants are used for breeding, or saved and cloned
for the following season.
Layers often seem
rejuvenated when they are re moved from the parent
plant and begin to be supported by their own root
systems. This could mean that a clone will
continue to grow longer and mature later than its
parent under the same conditions. Layers removed
from old or seeded parents will continue to
produce new calyxes and pistils instead of
completing the life cycle along with the parents.
Rejuvenated layers are useful for off-season seed
production.
Grafting
Intergeneric grafts
between Cannabis and Humulus (hops) have
fascinated researchers and cultivators for
decades. Warmke and Davidson (1943) claimed that
Humbles tops grafted upon Cannabis roots produced
". . . as much drug as leaves from intact hemp
plants, even though leaves from intact hop plants
are completely nontoxic." According to this
research, the active ingredient of Cannabis was
being produced in the roots and transported across
the graft to the Humulus tops. Later research by
Crombie and Crombie (1975) entirely disproves this
theory. Grafts were made between high and low THC
strains of Cannabis as well as intergeneric grafts
between Cannabis and Humulus, Detailed
chromatographic analysis was performed on both
donors for each graft and their control
populations. The results showed ". . . no evidence
of transport of inter mediates or factors critical
to cannabinoid formation across the
grafts."
Grafting of Cannabis
is very simple. Several seedlings can be grafted
together into one to produce very interesting
specimen plants. One procedure starts by planting
one seed ling each of several separate strains
close together in the same container, placing the
stock (root plant) for the cross in the center of
the rest. When the seedlings are four weeks old
they are ready to be grafted. A diagonal cut is
made approximately half-way through the stock stem
and one of the scion (shoot) seedlings at the same
level. The cut portions are slipped together such
that the inner cut surfaces are touching. The
joints are held with a fold of cellophane tape. A
second scion from an adjacent seedling may be
grafted to the stock higher up the stem. After two
weeks, the unwanted portions of the grafts are cut
away. Eight to twelve weeks are needed to complete
the graft, and the plants are maintained in a mild
environment at all times. As the graft takes, and
the plant begins to grow, the tape falls
off.
Pruning
Pruning techniques
are commonly used by Cannabis cultivators to limit
the size of their plants and promote branching.
Several techniques are available, and each has its
advantages and drawbacks. The most common method
is meristem pruning or stem tip removal. In this
case the growing tip of the main stalk or a limb
is removed at approximately the final length
desired for the stalk or limb. Below the point of
removal, the next pair of axial growing tips
begins to elongate and form two new limbs. The
growth energy of one stem is now divided into two,
and the diffusion of growth energy results in a
shorter plant which spreads
horizontally.
Auxin produced in the
tip meristem travels down the stem and inhibits
branching. When the meristem is re moved, the
auxin is no longer produced and branching may
proceed uninhibited. Plants that are normally very
tall and stringy can be kept short and bushy by
meristem pruning. Removing meristems also removes
the newly formed tissues near the meristem that
react to changing environmental stimuli and induce
flowering. Pruning during the early part of the
growth cycle will have little effect on flowering,
but plants that are pruned late in life,
supposedly to promote branching and floral growth,
will often flower late or fail to flower at all.
This happens because the meristemic tissue
responsible for sensing change has been removed
and the plant does not measure that it is the time
of the year to flower. Plants will usually mature
fastest if they are allowed to grow and develop
without interference from pruning. If late
maturation of Cannabis is desired, then extensive
pruning may work to delay flowering. This is
particularly applicable if a staminate plant from
an early maturing strain is needed to pollinate a
late-maturing pistil late plant. The staminate
plant is kept immature until the pistillate plant
is mature and ready to be pollinated. When the
pistillate plant is receptive, the staminate plant
is allowed to develop flowers and release
pollen.
Other techniques are
available for limiting the size and shape of a
developing Cannabis plant without removing
meristematic tissues. Trellising is a common form
of modification and is achieved in several ways.
In many cases space is available only along a
fence or garden row. Posts 1 to 2 meters (3 to 6
feet) long may be driven into the ground 1 to 3
meters (3 to 10 feet) apart and wires stretched
between them at 30 to 45 centimeters (12 to 18
inches) intervals, much like a wire fence or grape
trellis. Trellises are ideally oriented on an
east-west axis for maxi mum sun exposure.
Seedlings or pistillate clones are placed between
the posts, and as they grow they are gradually
bent and attached to the wire. The plant continues
to grow upward at the stem tips, but the limbs are
trained to grow horizontally. They are spaced
evenly along the wires by hooking the upturned
tips under the wire when they are 15 to 30
centimeters (6 to 12 inches) long. The plant grows
and spreads for some distance, but it is never
allowed to grow higher than the top row of wire.
When the plant be gins to flower, the floral
clusters are allowed to grow up ward in a row from
the wire where they receive maximum sun exposure.
The floral clusters are supported by the wire
above them, and they are resistant to weather
damage. Many cultivators feel that trellised
plants, with increased sun exposure and meristems
intact, produce a higher yield than freestanding
unpruned or pruned plants. Other growers feel that
any interference with natural growth patterns
limits the ultimate size and yield of the
plant.
Another method of
trellising is used when light exposure is
especially crucial, as with artificial lighting
systems. Plants are placed under a horizontal or
slightly slanted flat sheet of 2 to 5 centimeters
(1 to 2 inches) poultry netting which is suspended
on a frame 30 to 60 centimeters (12 to 24 inches)
from the soil surface perpendicular to the
direction of incoming light or to the lowest path
of the sun. The seedlings or clones begin to grow
through the netting al-? most immediately, and the
meristems are pushed back down under the netting,
forcing them to grow horizon tally outward. Limbs
are trained so that the mature plant will cover
the entire frame evenly. Once again, when the
plant begins to flower, the floral clusters are
allowed to grow upward through the wire as they
reach for the light. This might prove to be a
feasible commercial cultivation technique, since
the flat beds of floral clusters could be
mechanically harvested. Since no meristem tissues
are re moved, growth and maturation should proceed
on schedule. This system also provides maximum
light exposure for all the floral clusters, since
they are growing from a plane perpendicular to the
direction of light.
Sometimes limbs are
also tied down, or crimped and bent to limit
height and promote axial growth without meristem
removal. This is a particularly useful technique
for greenhouse cultivation, where plants often
reach the roof or walls and burn or rot from the
intense heat and condensation of water on the
inside of the greenhouse. To prevent rotting and
burning while leaving enough room for floral
clusters to form, the limbs are bent at least 60
centimeters (24 inches) beneath the roof of the
green house. Tying plants over allows more light
to strike the plant, promoting axial growth.
Crimping stems and bending them over results in
more light exposure as well as inhibiting the flow
of auxin down the stem from the tip. Once again,
as with meristem removal, this promotes axial
growth.
Limbing is another
common method of pruning Cannabis plants. Many
small limbs will usually grow from the bottom
portions of the plant, and due to shading they re
main small and fail to develop large floral
clusters. If these atrophied lower limbs are
removed, the plant can devote more of its floral
energies to the top parts of the plant with the
most sun exposure and the greatest chance of
pollination. The question arises of whether
removing entire limbs constitutes a shock to the
growing plant, possibly limiting its ultimate
size. It seems in this case that shock is
minimized by removing entire limbs, including
proportional amounts of stems, leaves, meristems,
and flowers; this probably results in less
metabolic imbalance than if only flowers, leaves,
or meristems were removed. Also, the lower limbs
are usually very small and seem of little
significance in the metabolism of the total plant.
In large plants, many limbs near the central stalk
also become shaded and atrophied and these are
also sometimes removed in an effort to increase
the yield of large floral clusters on the sunny
exterior margins.
Leafing is one of the
most misunderstood techniques of drug
Cannabiscultivation. In the mind of the
cultivator, several reasons exist for removing
leaves. Many feel that large shade leaves draw
energy from the flowering plant, and therefore the
flowering clusters will be smaller. It is felt
that by removing the leaves, surplus energy will
be available, and large floral clusters will be
formed. Also, some feel that inhibitors of
flowering, synthesized in the leaves during the
long noninductive days of summer, may be stored in
the older leaves that were formed during the
noninductive photoperiod. Possibly, if these
inhibitor-laden leaves are removed, the plant will
proceed to flower, and maturation will be
accelerated. Large leaves shade the inner portions
of the plant, and small atrophied floral clusters
may begin to develop if they receive more
light.
In actuality, few if
any of the theories behind leafing give any
indication of validity. Indeed, leafing possibly
serves to defeat its original purpose. Large
leaves have a definite function in the growth and
development of Cannabis. Large leaves serve as
photosynthetic factories for the production of
sugars and other necessary growth sub stances.
They also create shade, but at the same time they
are collecting valuable solar energy and producing
foods that will be used during the floral
development of the plant. Premature removal of
leaves may cause stunting, because the potential
for photosynthesis is reduced. As these leaves age
and lose their ability to carry on photo synthesis
they turn chlorotie (yellow) and fall to the
ground. In humid areas care is taken to remove the
yellow or brown leaves, because they might invite
attack by fungus. During chlorosis the plant
breaks down substances, such as chlorophylls, and
translocates the molecular components to a new
growing part of the plant, such as the flowers.
Most Cannabis plants begin to lose their larger
leaves when they enter the flowering stage, and
this trend continues until senescence. It is more
efficient for the plant to reuse the energy and
various molecular components of existing
chlorophyll than to synthesize new chlorophyll at
the time of flowering. During flowering this
energy is needed to form floral clusters and ripen
seeds.
Removing large
amounts of leaves may interfere with the metabolic
balance of the plant. If this metabolic change
occurs too late in the season it could interfere
with floral development and delay maturation. If
any floral inhibitors are removed, the intended
effect of accelerating flowering will probably be
counteracted by metabolic upset in the plant.
Removal of shade leaves does facilitate more light
reaching the center of the plant, but if there is
not enough food energy produced in the leaves, the
small internal floral clusters will probably not
grow any larger. Leaf removal may also cause sex
reversal resulting from a metabolic
change.
If leaves must be
removed, the petiole is cut so that at least an
inch remains attached to the stalk. Weaknesses in
the limb axis at the node result if the leaves are
pulled off at the abscission layer while they are
still green. Care is taken to see that the
shriveling petiole does not invite fungus
attack.
It should be
remembered that, regardless of strain or
environmental conditions, the plant strives to
reproduce, and reproduction is favored by early
maturation. This produces a situation where plants
are trying to mature and reproduce as fast as
possible. Although the purpose of leafing is to
speed maturation, disturbing the natural
progressive growth of a plant probably interferes
with its rapid development.
Cannabis grows
largest when provided with plentiful nutrients,
sunlight, and water and left alone to grow and
mature naturally. It must be remembered that any
alteration of the natural life cycle of Cannabis
will affect productivity. Imaginative combinations
and adaptations of propagation techniques exist,
based on specific situations of cultivation.
Logical choices are made to direct the natural
growth cycle of Cannabis to favor the timely
maturation of those products sought by the
cultivator, without sacrificing seed or clone
production.
Chapter
3 - Genetics and Breeding of
Cannabis
"The greatest service which
can be rendered to any country is to add a useful
plant to its culture."
- Thomas
Jefferson
Genetics
Although it is
possible to breed Cannabis with limited success
without any knowledge of the laws of inheritance,
the full potential of diligent breeding, and the
line of action most likely to lead to success, is
realized by breeders who have mastered a working
knowledge of genetics.
As we know already,
all information transmitted from generation to
generation must be contained in the pollen of the
staminate parent and the ovule of the pistillate
parent. Fertilization unites these two sets of
genetic information, a seed forms, and a new
generation is begun. Both pollen and ovules are
known as gametes, and the transmitted units
determining the expression of a character are
known as genes. Individual plants have two
identical sets of genes (2n) in every cell except
the gametes, which through reduction division have
only one set of genes (in). Upon fertilization one
set from each parent combines to form a seed
(2n).
In Cannabis, the
haploid (in) number of chromosomes is 10 and the
diploid (2n) number of chromosomes is 20. Each
chromosome contains hundreds of genes, influencing
every phase of the growth and development of the
plant.
If cross-pollination
of two plants with a shared genetic trait (or
self-pollination of a hermaphrodite) results in
off spring that all exhibit the same trait, and if
all subsequent (inbred) generations also exhibit
it, then we say that the strain (i.e., the line of
offspring derived from common ancestors) is
true-breeding, or breeds true, for that trait. A
strain may breed true for one or more traits while
varying in other characteristics. For example, the
traits of sweet aroma and early maturation may
breed true, while off spring vary in size and
shape. For a strain to breed true for some trait,
both of the gametes forming the offspring must
have an identical complement of the genes that
influence the expression of that trait. For
example, in a strain that breeds true for webbed
leaves, any gamete from any parent in that
population will contain the gene for webbed
leaves, which we will signify with the letter w.
Since each gamete carries one-half (in) of the
genetic complement of the offspring, it follows
that upon fertilization both "leaf shape" genes of
the (2n) offspring will be w. That is, the
offspring, like both parents, are ww. In turn, the
offspring also breed true for webbed leaves
because they have only w genes to pass on in their
gametes.
On the other hand,
when a cross produces offspring that do not breed
true (i.e., the offspring do not all resemble
their parents) we say the parents have genes that
segregate or are hybrid. Just as a strain can
breed true for one or more traits, it can also
segregate for one or more traits; this is often
seen. For example, consider a cross where some of
the offspring have webbed leaves and some have
normal compound-pinnate leaves. (To continue our
system of notation we will refer to the gametes of
plants with compound-pinnate leaves as W for that
trait. Since these two genes both influence leaf
shape, we assume that they are related genes,
hence the lower-case w and upper-case W notation
instead of w for webbed and possibly P for
pinnate.) Since the gametes of a true-breeding
strain must each have the same genes for the given
trait, it seems logical that gametes which produce
two types of offspring must have genetically
different parents.
Observation of many
populations in which offspring differed in
appearance from their parents led Mendel to his
theory of genetics. If like only sometimes
produces like, then what are the rules which
govern the outcome of these crosses? Can we use
these rules to predict the outcome of future
crosses?
Assume that we
separate two true-breeding populations of
Cannabis, one with webbed and one with
compound-pinnate leaf shapes. We know that all the
gametes produced by the webbed-leaf parents will
contain genes for leaf-shape w and all gametes
produced by the compound-pinnate individuals will
have W genes for leaf shape. (The offspring may
differ in other characteristics, of
course.)
If we make a cross
with one parent from each of the true-breeding
strains, we will find that 100% of the off spring
are of the compound-pinnate leaf phenotype. (The
expression of a trait in a plant or strain is
known as the phenotype.) What happened to the
genes for webbed leaves contained in the webbed
leaf parent? Since we know that there were just as
many w genes as W genes combined in the offspring,
the W gene must mask the expression of the w gene.
We term the W gene the dominant gene and say that
the trait of compound-pinnate leaves is dominant
over the recessive trait of webbed leaves. This
seems logical since the normal phenotype in
Cannabis has compound-pinnate leaves. It must be
remembered, however, that many useful traits that
breed true are recessive. The true-breeding
dominant or recessive condition, WW or ww, is
termed the homozygous condition; the segregating
hybrid condition wW or Ww is called heterozygous.
When we cross two of the F1 (first filial
generation) offspring resulting from the initial
cross of the ~1 (parental generation) we observe
two types of offspring. The F2 generation shows a
ratio of approximately 3:1, three compound pinnate
type-to-one webbed type. It should be remembered
that phenotype ratios are theoretical. The real
results may vary from the expected ratios,
especially in small samples.
In this case,
compound-pinnate leaf is dominant over webbed
leaf, so whenever the genes w and W are combined,
the dominant trait W will be expressed in the
phenotype. In the F2 generation only 25% of the
offspring are homozygous for W so only 25% are
fixed for W. The w trait is only expressed in the
F2 generation and only when two w genes are
combined to form a double-recessive, fixing the
recessive trait in 25% of the offspring. If
compound-pinnate showed incomplete dominance over
webbed, the genotypes in this example would remain
the same, but the phenotypes in the F1 generation
would all be intermediate types resembling both
parents and the F2 phenotype ratio would be 1
compound-pinnate :2 intermediate :1
webbed.
The explanation for
the predictable ratios of offspring is simple and
brings us to Mendel's first law, the first of the
basic rules of heredity:
I. Each of the genes
in a related pair segregate from each other during
gamete formation.
A common technique
used to deduce the genotype of the parents is the
back-cross. This is done by crossing one of the F1
progeny back to one of the true-breeding P1
parents. If the resulting ratio of phenotypes is
1:1 (one heterozygous to one homozygous) it proves
that the parents were indeed homozygous dominant
WW and homozygous-recessive ww.
The 1:1 ratio
observed when back-crossing F1 to P1 and the 1:2:1
ratio observed in F1 to F1 crosses are the two
basic Mendelian ratios for the inheritance of one
character controlled by one pair of genes. The
astute breeder uses these ratios to determine the
genotype of the parental plants and the relevance
of genotype to further breeding.
This simple example
may be extended to include the inheritance of two
or more unrelated pairs of genes at a time. For
instance we might consider the simultaneous
inheritance of the gene pairs T (tall)/t (short)
and M (early maturation)/m (late maturation). This
is termed a polyhybrid instead of monohybrid
cross. Mendel's second law allows us to predict
the outcome of polyhybrid crosses also:
II. Unrelated pairs
of genes are inherited independently of each
other.
If complete dominance
is assumed for both pairs of genes, then the 16
possible F2 genotype combinations will form 4 F2
phenotypes in a 9:3:3:1 ratio, the most frequent
of which is the double-dominant tall/early
condition. In complete dominance for both gene
pairs would result in 9 F2 phenotypes in a
1:2:1:2:4:2:1:2:1 ratio, directly reflecting the
genotype ratio. A mixed dominance condition would
result in 6 F2 phenotypes in a 6:3:3:2:1:1 ratio.
Thus, we see that a cross involving two
independently assorting pairs of genes results in
a 9:3:3:1 Mendelian phenotype ratio only if
dominance is complete. This ratio may differ,
depending on the dominance conditions present in
the original gene pairs. Also, two new phenotypes,
tall/late and short/early, have been created in
the F2 generation; these phenotypes differ from
both parents and grand parents. This phenomenon is
termed recombination and explains the frequent
observation that like begets like, but not exactly
like.
A polyhybrid
back-cross with two unrelated gene pairs exhibits
a 1:1 ratio of phenotypes as in the mono-hybrid
back-cross. It should be noted that despite
dominance influence, an F1 back-cross with the P1
homozygous-recessive yields the
homozygous-recessive phenotype short/late 25% of
the time, and by the same logic, a back cross with
the homozygous-dominant parent will yield the
homozygous dominant phenotype tall/early 25% of
the time. Again, the back-cross proves invaluable
in determining the F1 and P1 genotypes. Since all
four phenotypes of the back-cross progeny contain
at least one each of both recessive genes or one
each of both dominant genes, the back-cross
phenotype is a direct representation of the four
possible gametes produced by the F1
hybrid.
So far we have
discussed inheritance of traits con trolled by
discrete pairs of unrelated genes. Gene inter
action is the control of a trait by two or more
gene pairs. In this case genotype ratios will
remain the same but phenotype ratios may be
altered. Consider a hypothetical example where 2
dominant gene pairs Pp and Cc control late-season
anthocyanin pigmentation (purple color) in
Cannabis. If P is present alone, only the leaves
of the plant (under the proper environmental
stimulus) will exhibit accumulated anthocyanin
pigment and turn a purple color. If C is present
alone, the plant will remain green through out its
life cycle despite environmental conditions. If
both are present, however, the calyxes of the
plant will also exhibit accumulated anthocyanin
and turn purple as the leaves do. Let us assume
for now that this may be a desirable trait in
Cannabis flowers. What breeding techniques can be
used to produce this trait?
First, two homozygous
true-breeding ~1 types are crossed and the
phenotype ratio of the F1 offspring is
observed.
The phenotypes of the
F2 progeny show a slightly altered phenotype ratio
of 9:3:4 instead of the expected 9:3:3:1 for
independently assorting traits. If P and C must
both be present for any anthocyanin pigmentation
in leaves or calyxes, then an even more distorted
phenotype ratio of 9:7 will appear.
Two gene pairs may
interact in varying ways to pro duce varying
phenotype ratios. Suddenly, the simple laws of
inheritance have become more complex, but the data
may still be
interpreted.
Summary of Essential Points of
Breeding
1 - The genotypes of plants
are controlled by genes which are passed on
unchanged from generation to
generation.
2 - Genes occur in pairs,
one from the gamete of the staminate parent and
one from the gamete of the pistillate
parent.
3 - When the members of a
gene pair differ in their effect upon phenotype,
the plant is termed hybrid or
heterozygous.
4 - When the members of a
pair of genes are equal in their effect upon
phenotype, then they are termed true-breeding or
homozygous.
5 - Pairs of genes
controlling different phenotypic traits are
(usually) inherited independently.
6 - Dominance relations and
gene interaction can alter the phenotypic ratios
of the F1, F2, and subsequent
generations.
Polyploidy
Polyploidy is the
condition of multiple sets of chromosomes within
one cell. Cannabis has 20 chromosomes in the
vegetative diploid (2n) condition. Triploid (3n)
and tetraploid (4n) individuals have three or four
sets of chromosomes and are termed polyploids. It
is believed that the haploid condition of 10
chromosomes was likely derived by reduction from a
higher (polyploid) ancestral number (Lewis, W. H.
1980). Polyploidy has not been shown to occur
naturally in Cannabis; however, it may be induced
artificially with colchicine treatments.
Colchicine is a poisonous compound extracted from
the roots of certain Colchicum species; it
inhibits chromosome segregation to daughter cells
and cell wall formation, resulting in larger than
average daughter cells with multiple chromosome
sets. The studies of H. E. Warmke et al.
(1942-1944) seem to indicate that colchicine
raised drug levels in Cannabis. It is unfortunate
that Warmke was unaware of the actual psychoactive
ingredients of Cannabis and was therefore unable
to extract THC. His crude acetone extract and
archaic techniques of bioassay using killifish and
small freshwater crustaceans are far from
conclusive. He was, however, able to produce both
triploid and tetraploid strains of Cannabis with
up to twice the potency of dip bid strains (in
their ability to kill small aquatic organisms).
The aim of his research was to "produce a strain
of hemp with materially reduced cannabis content"
and his results indicated that polyploidy raised
the potency of Cannabis without any apparent
increase in fiber quality or yield.
Warmke's work with
polyploids shed light on the nature of sexual
determination in Cannabis. He also illustrated
that potency is genetically determined by creating
a lower potency strain of hemp through selective
breeding with low potency parents.
More recent research
by A. I. Zhatov (1979) with fiber Cannabis showed
that some economically valuable traits such as
fiber quantity may be improved through polyploidy.
Polyploids require more water and are usually more
sensitive to changes in environment. Vegetative
growth cycles are extended by up to 30-40% in
polyploids. An extended vegetative period could
delay the flowering of polyploid drug strains and
interfere with the formation of floral clusters.
It would be difficult to determine if cannabinoid
levels had been raised by polyploidy if polyploid
plants were not able to mature fully in the
favorable part of the season when cannabinoid
production is promoted by plentiful light and warm
temperatures. Greenhouses and artificial lighting
can be used to extend the season and test
polyploid strains.
The height of
tetraploid (4n) Cannabis in these experiments
often exceeded the height of the original diploid
plants by 25-30%. Tetraploids were intensely
colored, with dark green leaves and stems and a
well developed gross phenotype. Increased height
and vigorous growth, as a rule, vanish in
subsequent generations. Tetraploid plants often
revert back to the diploid condition, making it
difficult to support tetraploid populations.
Frequent tests are performed to determine if
ploidy is changing.
Triploid (3n) strains
were formed with great difficulty by crossing
artificially created tetraploids (4n) with dip
bids (2n). Triploids proved to be inferior to both
diploids and tetraploids in many cases.
De Pasquale et al.
(1979) conducted experiments with Cannabis which
was treated with 0.25% and 0.50% solutions of
colchicine at the primary meristem seven days
after generation. Treated plants were slightly
taller and possessed slightly larger leaves than
the controls, Anomalies in leaf growth occurred in
20% and 39%, respectively, of the surviving
treated plants. In the first group (0.25%)
cannabinoid levels were highest in the plants
without anomalies, and in the second group (0.50%)
cannabinoid levels were highest in plants with
anomalies, Overall, treated plants showed a
166-250% increase in THC with respect to controls
and a decrease of CBD (30-33%) and CBN (39-65%).
CBD (cannabidiol) and CBN (cannabinol) are
cannabinoids involved in the biosynthesis and
degradation of THC. THC levels in the control
plants were very low (less than 1%). Possibly
colchicine or the resulting polyploidy interferes
with cannabinoid biogenesis to favor THC. In
treated plants with deformed leaf lamina, 90% of
the cells are tetraploid (4n 40) and 10% diploid
(2n 20). In treated plants without deformed lamina
a few cells are tetraploid and the remainder are
triploid or diploid.
The transformation of
diploid plants to the tetraploid level inevitably
results in the formation of a few plants with an
unbalanced set of chromosomes (2n + 1, 2n - 1,
etc.). These plants are called aneuploids.
Aneuploids are inferior to polyploids in every
economic respect. Aneuploid Cannabis is
characterized by extremely small seeds. The weight
of 1,000 seeds ranges from 7 to 9 grams (1/4 to
1/3 ounce). Under natural conditions diploid
plants do not have such small seeds and average
14-19 grams (1/2-2/3 ounce) per 1,000 (Zhatov
1979).
Once again, little
emphasis has been placed on the relationship
between flower or resin production and polyploidy.
Further research to determine the effect of
polyploidy on these and other economically
valuable traits of Cannabisis needed.
Colchicine is sold by
laboratory supply houses, and breeders have used
it to induce polyploidy in Cannabis. However,
colchicine is poisonous, so special care is
exercised by the breeder in any use of it. Many
clandestine cultivators have started polyploid
strains with colchicine. Except for changes in
leaf shape and phyllotaxy, no out standing
characteristics have developed in these strains
and potency seems unaffected. However, none of the
strains have been examined to determine if they
are actually polyploid or if they were merely
treated with colchicine to no effect. Seed
treatment is the most effective and safest way to
apply colchicine. * In this way, the entire plant
growing from a colchicine-treated seed could be
polyploid and if any colchicine exists at the end
of the growing season the amount would be
infinitesimal. Colchicine is nearly always lethal
to Cannabis seeds, and in the treatment there is a
very fine line between polyploidy and death. In
other words, if 100 viable seeds are treated with
colchicine and 40 of them germinate it is unlikely
that the treatment induced polyploidy in any of
the survivors. On the other hand, if 1,000 viable
treated seeds give rise to 3 seedlings, the
chances are better that they are polyploid since
the treatment killed all of the seeds but those
three. It is still necessary to determine if the
offspring are actually polyploid by microscopic
examination.
The work of Menzel
(1964) presents us with a crude map of the
chromosomes of Cannabis, Chromosomes 2-6 and 9 are
distinguished by the length of each arm.
Chromosome 1 is distinguished by a large knob on
one end and a dark chromomere 1 micron from the
knob. Chromosome 7 is extremely short and dense,
and chromosome 8 is assumed to be the sex
chromosome. In the future, chromosome *The word
"safest" is used here as a relative term.
Coichicine has received recent media attention as
a dangerous poison and while these accounts are
probably a bit too lurid, the real dangers of
exposure to coichicine have not been fully
researched. The possibility of bodily harm exists
and this is multiplied when breeders inexperienced
in handling toxins use colchicine. Seed treatment
might be safer than spraying a grown plant but the
safest method of all is to not use colchicine.
mapping will enable us to picture the location of
the genes influencing the phenotype of Cannabis.
This will enable geneticists to determine and
manipulate the important characteristics contained
in the gene pool. For each trait the number of
genes in control will be known, which chromosomes
carry them, and where they are located along those
chromosomes.
Breeding
All of the Cannabis
grown in North America today originated in foreign
lands. The diligence of our ancestors in their
collection and sowing of seeds from superior
plants, together with the forces of natural
selection, have worked to create native strains
with localized characteristics of resistance to
pests, diseases, and weather conditions. In other
words, they are adapted to particular niches in
the ecosystem. This genetic diversity is nature's
way of protecting a species. There is hardly a
plant more flexible than Cannabis. As climate,
diseases, and pests change, the strain evolves and
selects new defenses, programmed into the genetic
orders contained in each generation of seeds.
Through the importation in recent times of fiber
and drug Cannabis, a vast pool of genetic material
has appeared in North America. Original fiber
strains have escaped and become acclimatized
(adapted to the environment), while domestic drug
strains (from imported seeds) have, unfortunately,
hybridized and acclimatized randomly, until many
of the fine gene combinations of imported Cannabis
have been lost.
Changes in
agricultural techniques brought on by
technological pressure, greed, and full-scale
eradication programs have altered the selective
pressures influencing Cannabis genetics. Large
shipments of inferior Cannabis containing poorly
selected seeds are appearing in North America and
elsewhere, the result of attempts by growers and
smugglers to supply an ever increasing market for
cannabis. Older varieties of Cannabis, associated
with long standing cultural patterns, may contain
genes not found in the newer commercial varieties.
As these older varieties and their corresponding
cultures become extinct, this genetic information
could be lost forever. The increasing popularity
of Cannabisand the requirements of agricultural
technology will call for uniform hybrid races that
are likely to displace primitive populations
worldwide.
Limitation of genetic
diversity is certain to result from concerted
inbreeding for uniformity. Should inbred Cannabis
be attacked by some previously unknown pest or
disease, this genetic uniformity could prove
disastrous due to potentially resistant diverse
genotypes having been dropped from the population.
If this genetic complement of resistance cannot be
reclaimed from primitive parental material,
resistance cannot be introduced into the ravaged
population. There may also be currently
unrecognized favorable traits which could be
irretrievably dropped from the Cannabis gene pool.
Human intervention can create new phenotypes by
selecting and recombining existing genetic
variety, but only nature can create variety in the
gene pool itself, through the slow process of
random mutation.
This does not mean
that importation of seed and selective
hybridization are always detrimental. Indeed these
principles are often the key to crop improvement,
but only when applied knowledgeably and
cautiously. The rapid search for improvements must
not jeopardize the pool of original genetic
information on which adaptation relies. At this
time, the future of Cannabislies in government and
clandestine collections. These collections are
often inadequate, poorly selected and badly
maintained. Indeed, the United Nations Cannabis
collection used as the primary seed stock for
worldwide governmental research is depleted and
spoiled.
Several steps must be
taken to preserve our vanishing genetic resources,
and action must be immediate:
- Seeds and pollen
should be collected directly from reliable and
knowledgeable sources. Government seizures and
smuggled shipments are seldom reliable seed
sources. The characteristics of both parents
must be known; consequently, mixed bales of
randomly pollinated cannabis are not suitable
seed sources, even if the exact origin of the
sample is certain. Direct contact should be made
with the farmer-breeder responsible for carrying
on the breeding traditions that have produced
the sample. Accurate records of every possible
parameter of growth must be kept with carefully
stored triplicate sets of seeds.
- Since Cannabis
seeds do not remain viable forever, even under
the best storage conditions, seed samples should
he replenished every third year. Collections
should be planted in conditions as similar as
possible to their original niche and allowed to
reproduce freely to minimize natural and
artificial selection of genes and ensure the
preservation of the entire gene pool. Half of
the original seed collection should be retained
until the viability of further generations is
confirmed, and to provide parental material for
comparison and back-crossing. Phenotypic data
about these subsequent generations should be
carefully recorded to aid in understanding the
genotypes contained in the collection. Favorable
traits of each strain should be characterized
and catalogued.
- It is possible
that in the future, Cannabis cultivation for
resale, or even personal use, may be legal but
only for approved, patented strains. Special
caution would be needed to preserve variety in
the gene pool should the patenting of Cannabis
strains become a reality.
- Favorable traits
must be carefully integrated into existing
strains.
The task outlined
above is not an easy one, given the current legal
restrictions on the collection of Cannabis seed.
In spite of this, the conscientious cultivator is
making a contribution toward preserving and
improving the genetics of this interesting
plant.
Even if a grower has
no desire to attempt crop improvement, successful
strains have to be protected so they do not
degenerate and can be reproduced if lost. Left to
the selective pressures of an introduced
environment, most drug strains will degenerate and
lose potency as they acclimatize to the new
conditions. Let me cite an example of a typical
grower with good intentions.
A grower in northern
latitudes selected an ideal spot to grow a crop
and prepared the soil well. Seeds were selected
from the best floral clusters of several strains
avail able over the past few years, both imported
and domestic. Nearly all of the staminate plants
were removed as they matured and a nearly seedless
crop of beautiful plants resulted. After careful
consideration, the few seeds from accidental
pollination of the best flowers were kept for the
following season, These seeds produced even bigger
and better plants than the year before and seed
collection was performed as before. The third
season, most of the plants were not as large or
desirable as the second season, but there were
many good individuals. Seed collection and
cultivation the fourth season resulted in plants
inferior even to the first crop, and this trend
continued year after year. What went wrong? The
grower collected seed from the best plants each
year and grew them under the same conditions. The
crop improved the first year. Why did the strain
degenerate?
This example
illustrates the unconscious selection for
undesirable traits. The hypothetical cultivator
began well by selecting the best seeds available
and growing them properly. The seeds selected for
the second season resulted from random hybrid
pollinations by early-flowering or overlooked
staminate plants and by hermaphrodite pistil late
plants. Many of these random pollen-parents may be
undesirable for breeding since they may pass on
tendencies toward premature maturation, retarded
maturation, or hermaphrodism. However, the
collected hybrid seeds pro duce, on the average,
larger and more desirable offspring than the first
season. This condition is called hybrid vigor and
results from the hybrid crossing of two diverse
gene pools. The tendency is for many of the
dominant characteristics from both parents to be
transmitted to the F1 off spring, resulting in
particularly large and vigorous plants. This
increased vigor due to recombination of dominant
genes often raises the cannabinoid level of the F1
offspring, but hybridization also opens up the
possibility that undesirable (usually recessive)
genes may form pairs and express their
characteristics in the F2 offspring. Hybrid vigor
may also mask inferior qualities due to abnormally
rapid growth. During the second season, random
pollinations again accounted for a few seeds and
these were collected. This selection draws on a
huge gene pool and the possible F2 combinations
are tremendous. By the third season the gene pool
is tending toward early-maturing plants that are
acclimatized to their new conditions instead of
the drug-producing conditions of their native
environment. These acclimatized members of the
third crop have a higher chance of maturing viable
seeds than the parental types, and random
pollinations will again increase the numbers of
acclimatized individuals, and thereby increase the
chance that undesirable characteristics associated
with acclimatization will be transmitted to the
next F2 generation. This effect is compounded from
generation to generation and finally results in a
fully acclimatized weed strain of little drug
value.
With some care the
breeder can avoid these hidden dangers of
unconscious selection. Definite goals are vital to
progress in breeding Cannabis. What qualities are
desired in a strain that it does not already
exhibit? What characteristics does a strain
exhibit that are unfavorable and should be bred
out? Answers to these questions suggest goals for
breeding. In addition to a basic knowledge of
Cannabis botany, propagation, and genetics, the
successful breeder also becomes aware of the most
minute differences and similarities in phenotype.
A sensitive rapport is established between breeder
and plants and at the same time strict guidelines
are followed. A simplified explanation of the
time-tested principles of plant breeding shows how
this works in practice.
Selection is the
first and most important step in the breeding of
any plant. The work of the great breeder and plant
wizard Luther Burbank stands as a beacon to
breeders of exotic strains. His success in
improving hundreds of flower, fruit, and vegetable
crops was the result of his meticulous selection
of parents from hundreds of thou sands of
seedlings and adults from the world
over.
Bear in mind that in
the production of any new plant, selection plays
the all-important part. First, one must get
clearly in mind the kind of plant he wants, then
breed and select to that end, always choosing
through a series of years the plants which are
approaching nearest the ideal, and rejecting all
others.
- Luther Burbank (in
James, 1964)
Proper selection of
prospective parents is only possible if the
breeder is familiar with the variable
characteristics of Cannabis that may be
genetically controlled, has a way to accurately
measure these variations, and has established
goals for improving these characteristics by
selective breeding. A detailed list of variable
traits of Cannabis, including parameters of
variation for each trait and comments pertaining
to selective breeding for or against it, are found
at the end of this chapter. By selecting against
unfavorable traits while selecting for favorable
ones, the unconscious breeding of poor strains is
avoided.
The most important
part of Burbank's message on selection tells
breeders to choose the plants "which are
approaching nearest the ideal," and REJECT ALL
OTHERS! Random pollinations do not allow the
control needed to reject the undesirable parents.
Any staminate plant that survives detection and
roguing (removal from the population), or any
stray staminate branch on a pistillate her
maphrodite may become a pollen parent for the next
generation. Pollination must be controlled so that
only the pollen- and seed-parents that have been
carefully selected for favorable traits will give
rise to the next generation.
Selection is greatly
improved if one has a large sample to choose from!
The best plant picked from a group of 10 has far
less chance of being significantly different from
its fellow seedlings than the best plant selected
from a sample of 100,000. Burbank often made his
initial selections of parents from samples of up
to 500,000 seedlings. Difficulties arise for many
breeders because they lack the space to keep
enough examples of each strain to allow a
significant selection. A Cannabis breeder's goals
are restricted by the amount of space available.
Formulating a well defined goal lowers the number
of individuals needed to perform effective
crosses. Another technique used by breeders since
the time of Burbank is to make early selections.
Seedling plants take up much less space than
adults. Thousands of seeds can be germinated in a
flat. A flat takes up the same space as a hundred
10-centimeter (4-inch) sprouts or six-teen
30-centimeter (12-inch) seedlings or one
60-centimeter (24-inch) juvenile. An adult plant
can easily take up as much space as a hundred
flats. Simple arithmetic shows that as many as
10,000 sprouts can be screened in the space
required by each mature plant, provided enough
seeds are available. Seeds of rare strains are
quite valuable and exotic; however, careful
selection applied to thousands of individuals,
even of such common strains as those from Colombia
or Mexico, may produce better offspring than
plants from a rare strain where there is little or
no opportunity for selection after germination.
This does not mean that rare strains are not
valuable, but careful selection is even more
important to successful breeding. The random
pollinations that produce the seeds in most
imported cannabis assure a hybrid condition which
results in great seed ling diversity. Distinctive
plants are not hard to discover if the seedling
sample is large enough.
Traits considered
desirable when breeding Cannabis often involve the
yield and quality of the final product, but these
characteristics can only be accurately measured
after the plant has been harvested and long after
it is possible to select or breed it. Early
seedling selection, therefore, only works for the
most basic traits. These are selected first, and
later selections focus on the most desirable
characteristics exhibited by juvenile or adult
plants. Early traits often give clues to mature
phenotypic expression, and criteria for effective
early seedling selection are easy to establish. As
an example, particularly tall and thin seedlings
might prove to be good parents for pulp or fiber
production, while seed lings of short internode
length and compound branching may be more suitable
for flower production. However, many important
traits to be selected for in Cannabis floral
clusters cannot be judged until long after the
parents are gone, so many crosses are made early
and selection of seeds made at a later
date.
Hybridization is the
process of mixing differing gene pools to produce
offspring of great genetic variation from which
distinctive individuals can be selected. The wind
performs random hybridization in nature. Under
cultivation, breeders take over to produce
specific, controlled hybrids. This process is also
known as cross-pollination, cross-fertilization,
or simply crossing. If seeds result, they will
produce hybrid offspring exhibiting some
characteristics from each parent.
Large amounts of
hybrid seed are most easily produced by planting
two strains side by side, removing the staininate
plants of the seed strain, and allowing nature to
take its course. Pollen- or seed-sterile strains
could be developed for the production of large
amounts of hybrid seed without the labor of
thinning; however, genes for sterility are rare.
It is important to remember that parental weak
nesses are transmitted to offspring as well as
strengths. Because of this, the most vigorous,
healthy plants are al ways used for hybrid
crosses.
Also, sports (plants
or parts of plants carrying and expressing
spontaneous mutations) most easily transmit mutant
genes to the offspring if they are used as pollen
parents. If the parents represent diverse gene
pools, hybrid vigor results, because dominant
genes tend to carry valuable traits and the
differing dominant genes inherited from each
parent mask recessive traits inherited from the
other. This gives rise to particularly large,
healthy individuals. To increase hybrid vigor in
offspring, parents of different geo graphic
origins are selected since they will probably
represent more diverse gene pools.
Occasionally hybrid
offspring will prove inferior to both parents, but
the first generation may still contain recessive
genes for a favorable characteristic seen in a
parent if the parent was homozygous for that
trait. First generation (F1) hybrids are therefore
inbred to allow recessive genes to recombine and
express the desired parental trait. Many breeders
stop with the first cross and never realize the
genetic potential of their strain. They fail to
produce an F2 generation by crossing or
self-pollinating F1 offspring. Since most domestic
Cannabis strains are F1 hybrids for many
characteristics, great diversity and recessive
recombination can result from inbreeding domestic
hybrid strains. In this way the breeding of the F1
hybrids has already been accomplished, and a year
is saved by going directly to F2 hybrids. These F2
hybrids are more likely to express recessive
parental traits. From the F2 hybrid generation
selections can be made for parents which are used
to start new true-breeding strains. Indeed, F2
hybrids might appear with more extreme
characteristics than either of the P~ parents.
(For example, P1 high-THC X P1 low-THC yields F1
hybrids of intermediate THC content. Selfing the
F1 yields F2 hybrids, of both P1 [high and low
THC] phenotypes, inter mediate F1 phenotypes, and
extra-high THC as well as extra-low THC
phenotypes.)
Also, as a result of
gene recombination, F1 hybrids are not
true-breeding and must be reproduced from the
original parental strains. When breeders create
hybrids they try to produce enough seeds to last
for several successive years of cultivation, After
initial field tests, undesirable hybrid seeds are
destroyed and desirable hybrid seeds stored for
later use. If hybrids are to be reproduced, a
clone is saved from each parental plant to
preserve original parental genes.
Back-crossing is
another technique used to produce offspring with
reinforced parental characteristics. In this case,
a cross is made between one of the F~ or
subsequent offspring and either of the parents
expressing the desired trait. Once again this
provides a chance for recombination and possible
expression of the selected parental trait.
Back-crossing is a valuable way of producing new
strains, but it is often difficult because
Cannabis is an annual, so special care is taken to
save parental stock for back-crossing the
following year. Indoor lighting or greenhouses can
be used to protect breeding stock from winter
weather. In tropical areas plants may live outside
all year. In addition to saving particular
parents, a successful breeder always saves many
seeds from the original P1 group that produced the
valuable characteristic so that other P1 plants
also exhibiting the characteristic can be grown
and selected for back-crossing at a later
time.
Several types of
breeding are summarized as follows:
1 - Crossing two
varieties having outstanding qualities
(hybridization).
2 - Crossing
individuals from the F1 generation or selfing F1
individuals to realize the possibilities of the
original cross (differentiation).
3 - Back crossing to
establish original parental types.
4 - Crossing two
similar true-breeding (homozygous) varieties to
preserve a mutual trait and restore
vigor.
It should be noted
that a hybrid plant is not usually hybrid for all
characteristics nor does a true-breeding strain
breed true for all characteristics. When
discussing crosses, we are talking about the
inheritance of one or a few traits only. The
strain may be true-breeding for only a few traits,
hybrid for the rest. Monohybrid crosses involve
one trait, dihybrid crosses involve two traits,
and so forth. Plants have certain limits of
growth, and breeding can only pro duce a plant
that is an expression of some gene already present
in the total gene pool. Nothing is actually
created by breeding; it is merely the
recombination of existing genes into new
genotypes. But the possibilities of recombination
are nearly limitless.
The most common use
of hybridization is to cross two outstanding
varieties. Hybrids can be produced by crossing
selected individuals from different high-potency
strains of different origins, such as Thailand and
Mexico. These two parents may share only the
characteristic of high psycho activity and differ
in nearly every other respect. From this great
exchange of genes many phenotypes may appear in
the F2 generation. From these offspring the
breeder selects individuals that express the best
characteristics of the parents. As an example,
consider some of the offspring from the P1
(parental) cross: Mexico X Thailand. In this case,
genes for high drug content are selected from both
parents while other desirable characteristics can
be selected from either one. Genes for large
stature and early maturation are selected from the
Mexican seed-parent, and genes for large calyx
size and sweet floral aroma are selected from the
Thai pollen parent. Many of the F1 offspring
exhibit several of the desired characteristics. To
further promote gene segregation, the plants most
nearly approaching the ideal are crossed among
themselves. The F2 generation is a great source of
variation and recessive expression. In the F2
generation there are several individuals out of
many that exhibit all five of the selected
characteristics. Now the process of inbreeding
begins, using the desirable F2 parents.
If possible, two or
more separate lines are started, never allowing
them to interbreed. In this case one accept able
staminate plant is selected along with two
pistillate plants (or vice versa). Crosses between
the pollen parent and the two seed parents result
in two lines of inheritance with slightly
differing genetics, but each expressing the
desired characteristics. Each generation will
produce new, more acceptable
combinations.
If two inbred strains
are crossed, F1 hybrids will be less variable than
if two hybrid strains are crossed. This comes from
limiting the diversity of the gene pools in the
two strains to be hybridized through previous
inbreeding. Further independent selection and
inbreeding of the best plants for several
generations will establish two strains which are
true-breeding for all the originally selected
traits. This means that all the offspring from any
parents in the strain will give rise to seedlings
which all exhibit the selected traits. Successive
inbreeding may by this time have resulted in
steady decline in the vigor of the
strain.
When lack of vigor
interferes with selecting phenotypes for size and
hardiness, the two separately selected strains can
then be interbred to recombine nonselected genes
and restore vigor. This will probably not
interfere with breeding for the selected traits
unless two different gene systems control the same
trait in the two separate lines, and this is
highly unlikely. Now the breeder has produced a
hybrid strain that breeds true for large size,
early maturation, large sweet-smelling calyxes,
and high THC level. The goal has been
reached!
Wind pollination and
dioecious sexuality favor a heterozygous gene pool
in Cannabis. Through Anbreeding, hybrids are
adapted from a heterozygous gene pool to a
homozygous gene pool, providing the genetic
stability needed to create true-breeding strains.
Establishing pure strains enables the breeder to
make hybrid crosses with a better chance of
predicting the outcome. Hybrids can be created
that are not reproducible in the F2 generation.
Commercial strains of seeds could be developed
that would have to be purchased each year, because
the F1 hybrids of two pure-bred lines do not breed
true. Thus, a seed breeder can protect the
investment in the results of breeding, since it
would be nearly impossible to reproduce the
parents from F2 seeds.
At this time it seems
unlikely that a plant patent would be awarded for
a pure-breeding strain of drug Cannabis. In the
future, however, with the legalization of
cultivation, it is a certainty that corporations
with the time, space, and money to produce pure
and hybrid strains of Cannabis will apply for
patents. It may be legal to grow only certain
patented strains produced by large seed companies.
Will this be how government and industry combine
to control the quality and quantity of "drug"
Cannabis?
Acclimatization
Much of the breeding
effort of North American cultivators is concerned
with acclimatizing high-THC strains of equatorial
origin to the climate of their growing area while
preserving potency. Late-maturing, slow, and
irregularly flowering strains like those of
Thailand have difficulty maturing in many parts of
North America. Even in a green house, it may not
be possible to mature plants to their full native
potential.
To develop an
early-maturing and rapidly flowering 8train, a
breeder may hybridize as in the previous example.
However, if it is important to preserve unique
imported genetics, hybridizing may be inadvisable.
Alternatively, a pure cross is made between two or
more Thai plants that most closely approach the
ideal in blooming early. At this point the breeder
may ignore many other traits and aim at breeding
an earlier-maturing variety of a pure Thai strain.
This strain may still mature considerably later
than is ideal for the particular location unless
selective pressure is exerted. If further crosses
are made with several individuals that satisfy
other criteria such as high THC content, these may
be used to develop another pure Thai strain of
high THC content. After these true-breeding lines
have been established, a dihybrid pure cross can
be made in an attempt to produce an F1 generation
containing early-maturing, high-THC strains of
pure Thai genetics, in other words, an
acclimatized drug strain.
Crosses made without
a clear goal in mind lead to strains that
acclimatize while losing many favorable
characteristics. A successful breeder is careful
not to overlook a characteristic that may prove
useful. It is imperative that original imported
Cannabis genetics be preserved intact to protect
the species from loss of genetic variety through
excessive hybridization. A currently unrecognized
gene may be responsible for controlling resistance
to a pest or disease, and it may only be possible
to breed for this gene by back-crossing existing
strains to original parental gene
pools.
Once pure breeding
lines have been established, plant breeders
classify and statistically analyze the offspring
to determine the patterns of inheritance for that
trait. This is the system used by Gregor Mendel to
formulate the basic laws of inheritance and aid
the modern breeder in predicting the outcome of
crosses,
1 - Two pure lines of
Cannabis that differ in a particular trait are
located.
2 - These two
pure-breeding lines are crossed to pro duce an F1
generation.
3 - The F1 generation
is inbred.
4 - The offspring of
the F1 and F2 generations are classified with
regard to the trait being studied.
5 - The results are
analyzed statistically.
6 - The results are
compared to known patterns of inheritance so the
nature of the genes being selected for can be
characterized.
Fixing Traits
Fixing traits
(producing homozygous offspring) in Cannabis
strains is more difficult than it is in many other
flowering plants. With monoecious strains or
hermaphrodites it is possible to fix traits by
self-pollinating an individual exhibiting
favorable traits. In this case one plant acts as
both mother and father. However, most strains of
Cannabis are dioecious, and unless hermaphroditic
reactions can be induced, another parent
exhibiting the trait is required to fix the trait.
If this is not possible, the unique individual may
be crossed with a plant not exhibiting the trait,
inbred in the F1 generation, and selections of
parents exhibiting the favorable trait made from
the F2 generation, but this is very
difficult.
If a trait is needed
for development of a dioecious strain it might
first be discovered in a monoecious strain and
then fixed through selfing and selecting
homozygous offspring. Dioecious individuals can
then be selected from the monoecious population
and these individuals crossed to breed out
monoecism in subsequent generations.
Galoch (1978)
indicated that gibberellic acid (GA3) promoted
stamen production while indoleacetic acid (IAA),
ethrel, and kinetin promoted pistil production in
prefloral dioecious Cannabis. Sex alteration has
several useful applications. Most importantly, if
only one parent expressing a desirable trait can
be found, it is difficult to perform a cross
unless it happens to be a hermaphrodite plant.
Hormones might be used to change the sex of a
cutting from the desirable plant, and this cutting
used to mate with it. This is most easily
accomplished by changing a pistillate cutting to a
staminate (pollen) parent, using a spray of 100
ppm gibberellic acid in water each day for five
consecutive days. Within two weeks staminate
flowers may appear. Pollen can then be collected
for selfing with the original pistillate parent.
Offspring from the cross should also be mostly
pistillate since the breeder is selfing for
pistillate sexuality. Staminate parents reversed
to pistillate floral production make inferior
seed-parents since few pistillate flowers and
seeds are formed.
If entire crops could
be manipulated early in life to produce all
pistillate or staminate plants, seed production
and seedless drug Cannabis production would be
greatly facilitated.
Sex reversal for
breeding can also be accomplished by mutilation
and by photoperiod alteration. A well-rooted,
flourishing cutting from the parent plant is
pruned back to 25% of its original size and
stripped of all its remaining flowers. New growth
will appear within a few days, and several flowers
of reversed sexual type often appear. Flowers of
the unwanted sex are removed until the cutting is
needed for fertilization. Extremely short light
cycles (6-8 hour photoperiod) can also cause sex
reversal. How ever, this process takes longer and
is much more difficult to perform in the
field.
Genotype and Phenotype Ratios
It must be
remembered, in attempting to fix favorable
characteristics, that a monohybrid cross gives
rise to four possible recombinant genotypes, a
dihybrid cross gives rise to 16 possible
recombinant genotypes, and so forth.
Phenotype and
genotype ratios are probabilistic. If recessive
genes are desired for three traits it is not
effective to raise only 64 offspring and count on
getting one homozygous recessive individual. To
increase the probability of success it is better
to raise hundreds of offspring, choosing only the
best homozygous recessive individuals as future
parents. All laws of inheritance are based on
chance and offspring may not approach predicted
ratios until many more have been phenotypically
characterized and grouped than the theoretical
minimums.
The genotype of each
individual is expressed by a mosaic of thousands
of subtle overlapping traits. It is the sum total
of these traits that determines the general
phenotype of an individual. It is often difficult
to determine if the characteristic being selected
is one trait or the blending of several traits and
whether these traits are controlled by one or
several pairs of genes. It often makes little
difference that a breeder does not have plants
that are proven to breed true. Breeding goals can
still be established. The selfing of F1 hybrids
will often give rise to the variation needed in
the F2 generation for selecting parents for
subsequent generations, even if the
characteristics of the original parents of the F1
hybrid are not known. It is in the following
generations that fixed characteristics appear and
the breeding of pure strains can begin. By
selecting and crossing individuals that most
nearly approach the ideal described by the
breeding goals, the variety can be continuously
improved even if the exact patterns of inheritance
are never deter mined. Complementary traits are
eventually combined into one line whose seeds
reproduce the favorable parental traits.
Inbreeding strains also allows weak recessive
traits to express themselves and these
abnormalities must be diligently removed from the
breeding population. After five or six
generations, strains become amazingly uniform.
Vigor is occasionally restored by crossing with
other lines or by backcrossing.
Parental plants are
selected which most nearly approach the ideal. If
a desirable trait is not expressed by the parent,
it is much less likely to appear in the offspring.
It is imperative that desirable characteristics be
hereditary and not primarily the result of
environment and cultivation. Acquired traits are
not hereditary and cannot be made hereditary.
Breeding for as few traits as possible at one time
greatly increases the chance of success. In
addition to the specific traits chosen as the aims
of breeding, parents are selected which possess
other generally desirable traits such as vigor and
size. Determinations of dominance and
recessiveness can only be made by observing the
outcome of many crosses, although wild traits
often tend to be dominant. This is one of the keys
to adaptive survival. However, all the possible
combinations will appear in the F2 generation if
it is large enough, regardless of
dominance.
Now, after further
simplifying this wonderful system of inheritance,
there are additional exceptions to the rules which
must be explored. In some cases, a pair of genes
may control a trait but a second or third pair of
genes is needed to express this trait. This is
known as gene inter action. No particular genetic
attribute in which we may be interested is totally
isolated from other genes and the effects of
environment. Genes are occasionally transferred in
groups instead of assorting independently. This is
known as gene linkage, These genes are spaced
along the same chromosome and may or may not
control the same trait. The result of linkage
might be that one trait cannot be inherited
without another. At times, traits are associated
with the X and Y sex chromosomes and they may be
limited to expression in only one sex (sex
linkage). Crossing over also interferes with the
analysis of crosses. Crossing over is the
exchanging of entire pieces of genetic material
between two chromosomes. This can result in two
genes that are normally linked appearing on
separate chromosomes where they will be
independently inherited. All of these processes
can cause crosses to deviate from the expected
Mendelian outcome. Chance is a major factor in
breeding Cannabis, or any introduced plant, and
the more crosses a breeder attempts the higher are
the chances of success.
Variate, isolate,
intermate, evaluate, multiplicate, and disseminate
are the key words in plant improvement. A plant
breeder begins by producing or collecting various
prospective parents from which the most desirable
ones are selected and isolated. Intermating of the
select parents results in offspring which must be
evaluated for favorable characteristics. If
evaluation indicates that the offspring are not
improved, then the process is repeated. Improved
off spring are multiplied and disseminated for
commercial use. Further evaluation in the field is
necessary to check for uniformity and to choose
parents for further intermating. This cyclic
approach provides a balanced system of plant
improvement.
The basic nature of
Cannabis makes it challenging
to
breed. Wind
pollination and dioecious sexuality,
which
account for the great
adaptability in Cannabis, cause many
problems in breeding,
but none of these are insurmountable. Developing a
knowledge and feel for the plant is more important
than memorizing Mendelian ratios. The words of the
great Luther Burbank say it well, "Heredity is
indelibly fixed by repetition."
The first set of
traits concerns Cannabis plants as a whole while
the remainder concern the qualities of seedlings,
leaves, fibers, and flowers. Finally a list of
various Cannabis strains is provided along with
specific characteristics. Following this order,
basic and then specific selections of favorable
characteristics can be made.
List of Favorable
Traits of Cannabis
in Which Variation
Occurs
1. General
Traits
a) Size and
Yield
b) Vigor
c)
Adaptability
d)
Hardiness
e) Disease and Pest
Resistance
f)
Maturation
g) Root
Production
h)
Branching
i)
Sex
2. Seedling
Traits
3. Leaf
Traits
4. Fiber
Traits
5. Floral
Traits
a) Shape
b) Form
c) Calyx
Size
d) Color
e) Cannabinoid
Level
f) Taste and
Aroma
g) Persistence of
Aromatic Principles and Cannabinoids
h) Trichome
Type
i) Resin Quantity and
Quality
j) Resin
Tenacity
k) Drying and Curing
Rate
I) Ease of
Manicuring
m) Seed
Characteristics
n)
Maturation
o)
Flowering
p)
Ripening
q) Cannabinoid
Profile
6. Gross Phenotypes
of Cannabis Strains
1. General
Traits
a) Size and Yield - The size of an
individual Cannabis plant is determined by
environmental factors such as room for root and
shoot growth, adequate light and nutrients, and
proper irrigation. These environmental factors
influence the phenotypic image of genotype, but
the genotype of the individual is responsible for
overall variations in gross morphology, including
size. Grown under the same conditions,
particularly large and small individuals are
easily spotted and selected. Many dwarf Cannabis
plants have been re ported and dwarfism may be
subject to genetic control, as it is in many
higher plants, such as dwarf corn and citrus.
Cannabis parents selected for large size tend to
produce offspring of a larger average size each
year. Hybrid crosses between tall (Cannabis
sativa-Mexico) strains and short (Cannabis
ruderalis-Russia) strains yield F1 offspring of
intermediate height (Beutler and der Marderosian
1978). Hybrid vigor, however, will influence the
size of offspring more than any other genetic
factor. The increased size of hybrid offspring is
often amazing and accounts for much of the success
of Cannabis cultivators in raising large plants.
It is not known whether there is a set of genes
for "gigantism" in Cannabis or whether polyploid
individuals really yield more than diploid due to
increased chromosome count. Tetraploids tend to be
taller and their water re quirements are often
higher than diploids. Yield is determined by the
overall production of fiber, seed, or resin and
selective breeding can be used to increase the
yield of any one of these products. However,
several of these traits may be closely related,
and it may be impossible to breed for one without
the other (gene linkage). Inbreeding of a pure
strain increases yield only if high yield parents
are selected. High yield plants, staminate or
pistillate, are not finally selected until the
plants are dried and manicured. Because of this,
many of the most vigorous plants are crossed and
seeds selected after harvest when the yield can be
measured.
b) Vigor - Large size is often
also a sign of healthy vigorous growth. A plant
that begins to grow immediately will usually reach
a larger size and produce a higher yield in a
short growing season than a sluggish, slow-growing
plant. Parents are always selected for rich green
foliage and rapid, responsive growth. This will
ensure that genes for certain weaknesses in
overall growth and development are bred out of the
population while genes for strength and vigor
remain.
c) Adaptability - It is important
for a plant with a wide distribution such as
Cannabis to be adaptable to many different
environmental conditions. Indeed, Cannabis is one
of the most genotypically diverse and
phenotypically plastic plants on earth; as a
result it has adapted to environ mental conditions
ranging from equatorial to temperate climates.
Domestic agricultural circumstances also dictate
that Cannabis must be grown under a great variety
of conditions,
Plants to be selected for
adaptability are cloned and grown in several
locations. The parental stocks with the highest
survival percentages can be selected as
prospective parents for an adaptable strain.
Adaptability is really just another term for
hardiness under varying growth
conditions.
d) Hardiness - The hardiness of a
plant is its overall resistance to heat and frost,
drought and overwatering, and so on. Plants with a
particular resistance appear when adverse
conditions lead to the death of the rest of a
large population. The surviving few members of the
population might carry inheritable resistance to
the environmental factor that destroyed the
majority of the population. Breeding these
survivors, subjecting the offspring to continuing
stress conditions, and selecting carefully for
several generations should result in a
pure-breeding strain with increased resistance to
drought, frost, or excessive heat.
e) Disease and Pest Resistance -
In much the same way as for hardiness a strain may
be bred for resistance to a certain disease, such
as damping-off fungus. If flats of seedlings are
infected by damping-off disease and nearly all of
them die, the remaining few will have some
resistance to damping-off fungus. If this
resistance is inheritable, it can be passed on to
subsequent generations by crossing these surviving
plants. Subsequent crossing, tested by inoculating
flats of seedling offspring with damping-off
fungus, should yield a more resistant
strain.
Resistance to pest attack works in
much the same way. It is common to find stands of
Cannabis where one or a few plants are infested
with insects while adjacent plants are untouched.
Cannabinoid and terpenoid resins are most probably
responsible for repelling insect attack, and
levels of these vary from plant to plant. Cannabis
has evolved defenses against insect attack in the
form of resin-secreting glandular trichomes, which
cover the reproductive and associated vegetative
structures of mature plants. Insects, finding the
resin disagreeable, rarely attack mature Cannabis
flowers. However, they may strip the outer leaves
of the same plant because these develop fewer
glandular tri chomes and protective resins than
the flowers. Non-glandular cannabinoids and other
compounds produced within leaf and stem tissues
which possibly inhibit insect attack, may account
for the varying resistance of seedlings and
vegetative juvenile plants to pest infestation.
With the popularity of greenhouse Cannabis
cultivation, a strain is needed with increased
resistance to mold, mite, aphid,- or white fly
infestation. These problems are often so severe
that greenhouse cultivators destroy any plants
which are attacked. Molds usually reproduce by
wind-borne spores, so negligence can rapidly lead
to epidemic disaster. Selection and breeding of
the least infected plants should result in strains
with increased resistance.
f) Maturation - Control of the
maturation of Cannabis is very important no matter
what the reason for growing it. If Cannabis is to
be grown for fiber it is important that the
maximum fiber content of the crop be reached early
and that all of the individuals in the crop mature
at the same time to facilitate commercial
harvesting. Seed production requires the even
maturation of both pollen and seed parents to
ensure even setting and maturation of seeds. An
uneven maturation of seeds would mean that some
seeds would drop and be lost while others are
still ripening. An understanding of floral
maturation is the key to the production of high
quality drug Cannabis. Changes in gross morphology
are accompanied by changes in cannabinoid and
terpenoid production and serve as visual keys to
deter mining the ripeness of Cannabis
flowers.
A Cannabis plant may mature either
early or late, be fast or slow to flower, and
ripen either evenly or sequentially.
Breeding for early or late
maturation is certainly a reality; it is also
possible to breed for fast or slow flowering and
even or sequential ripening. In general, crosses
between early-maturing plants give rise to
early-maturing offspring, crosses between
late-maturing plants give rise to late-maturing
offspring, and crosses between late- and
early-maturing plants give rise to offspring of
intermediate maturation. This seems to indicate
that maturation of Cannabis is not controlled by
the simple dominance and recessiveness of one gene
but probably results from incomplete dominance and
a combination of genes for separate aspects of
maturation. For instance, Sorghum maturation is
controlled by four separate genes. The sum of
these genes produces a certain phenotype for
maturation. Al though breeders do not know the
action of each specific gene, they still can breed
for the total of these traits and achieve results
more nearly approaching the goal of timely
maturation than the parental
strains.
g) Root
Production - The size and shape of Cannabis root
systems vary greatly. Although every embryo sends
out a taproot from which lateral roots grow, the
individual growth pattern and final size and shape
of the roots vary considerably. Some plants send
out a deep taproot, up to 1 meter (39 inches)
long, which helps support the plant against winds
and rain. Most Cannabis plants, however, produce a
poor taproot which rarely extends more than 30
centimeters (1 foot). Lateral growth is
responsible for most of the roots in Cannabis
plants. These fine lateral roots offer the plant
additional support but their primary function is
to absorb water and nutrients from the soil. A
large root system will be able to feed and support
a large plant. Most lateral roots grow near the
surface of the soil where there is more water,
more oxygen, and more avail able nutrients.
Breeding for root size and shape may prove
beneficial for the production of large rain- and
wind-resistant strains. Often Cannabis plants,
even very large ones, have very small and
sensitive root systems. Recently, certain
alkaloids have been discovered in the roots of
Cannabis that might have some medical value. If
this proves the case, Cannabis may be cultivated
and bred for high alkaloid levels in the roots to
be used in the commercial production of
pharmaceuticals.
As with many traits, it is
difficult to make selections for root types until
the parents are harvested. Because of this many
crosses are made early and seeds selected
later.
h) Branching - The branching
pattern of a Cannabis plant is determined by the
frequency of nodes along each branch and the
extent of branching at each node. For examples,
consider a tall, thin plant with slender limbs
made up of long internodes and nodes with little
branching (Oaxaca, Mexico strain). Compare this
with a stout, densely branched plant with limbs of
short internodes and highly branched nodes (Hindu
Kush hashish strains). Different branching
patterns are preferred for the different
agricultural applications of fiber, flower, or
resin production. Tall, thin plants with long
internodes and no branching are best adapted to
fiber production; a short, broad plant with short
inter nodes and well developed branching is best
adapted to floral production. Branching structure
is selected that will tolerate heavy rains and
high winds without breaking. This is quite
advantageous to outdoor growers in temperate zones
with short seasons. Some breeders select tall,
limber plants (Mexico) which bend in the wind;
others select short, stiff plants (Hindu Kush)
which resist the weight of water without
bending.
i) Sex - Attempts to breed
offspring of only one sexual type have led to more
misunderstanding than any other facet of Cannabis
genetics. The discoveries of McPhee (1925) and
Schaffner (1928) showed that pure sexual type and
hermaphrodite conditions are inherited and that
the percentage of sexual types could be altered by
crossing with certain hermaphrodites. Since then
it has generally been assumed by researchers and
breeders that a cross between ANY unselected
hermaphrodite plant and a pistillate seed-parent
should result in a population of all pistillate
offspring. This is not the case. In most cases,
the offspring of hermaphrodite parents tend toward
hermaphrodism, which is largely unfavorable for
the production of Cannabis other than fiber hemp.
This is not to say that there is no tendency for
hermaphrodite crosses to alter sex ratios in the
offspring. The accidental release of some pollen
from predominantly pistillate hermaphrodites,
along with the complete eradication of nearly
every staminate and staminate hermaphrodite plant
may have led to a shift in sexual ratio in
domestic populations of sinsemilla drug Cannabis.
It is commonly observed that these strains tend
toward 60% to 80% pistillate plants and a few
pistillate hermaphrodites are not uncommon in
these populations.
However, a cross can be made which
will produce nearly all pistillate or staminate
individuals. If the proper pistillate
hermaphrodite plant is selected as the
pollen-parent and a pure pistillate plant is
selected as the seed-parent it is possible to
produce an F1, and subsequent generations, of
nearly all pistillate offspring. The proper
pistillate hermaphrodite pollen-parent is one
which has grown as a pure pistillate plant and at
the end of the sea son, or under artificial
environmental stress, begins to develop a very few
staminate flowers. If pollen from these few
staminate flowers forming on a pistillate plant is
applied to a pure pistillate seed parent, the
resulting F1 generation should be almost all
pistillate with only a few pistillate
hermaphrodites. This will also be the case if the
selected pistillate hermaphrodite pollen source is
selfed and bears its own seeds. Remember that a
selfed hermaphrodite gives rise to more
hermaphrodites, but a selfed pistillate plant that
has given rise to a limited number of staminate
flowers in response to environmental stresses
should give rise to nearly all pistillate
offspring. The F1 offspring may have a slight
tendency to produce a few staminate flowers under
further environmental stress and these are used to
produce F2 seed. A monoecious strain produces 95+%
plants with many pistillate and staminate flowers,
but a dioecious strain produces 95+% pure
pistillate or staminate plants. A plant from a
dioecious strain with a few inter sexual flowers
is a pistillate or staminate hermaphrodite.
Therefore, the difference between monoecism and
her maphrodism is one of degree, determined by
genetics and environment.
Crosses may
also be performed to produce nearly all staminate
offspring. This is accomplished by crossing a pure
staminate plant with a staminate plant that has
produced a few pistillate flowers due to
environmental stress, or selfing the latter plant.
It is readily apparent that in the wild this is
not a likely possibility. Very few staminate
plants live long enough to produce pistillate
flowers, and when this does happen the number of
seeds produced is limited to the few pistillate
flowers that occur. In the case of a pistillate
hermaphrodite, it may produce only a few staminate
flowers, but each of these may produce thou sands
of pollen grains, any one of which may fertilize
one of the plentiful pistillate flowers, producing
a seed. This is another reason that natural
Cannabis populations tend toward predominantly
pistillate and pistillate hermaphrodite plants.
Artificial hermaphrodites can be produced by
hormone sprays, mutilation, and altered light
cycles. These should prove most useful for fixing
traits and sexual type.
Drug strains are selected for
strong dioecious tendencies. Some breeders select
strains with a sex ratio more nearly approaching
one than a strain with a high pistillate sex
ratio. They believe this reduces the chances of
pistillate plants turning hermaphrodite later in
the season.
2. Seedling Traits
Seedling traits can be very useful
in the efficient and purposeful selection of
future parental stock. If accurate selection can
be exercised on small seedlings, much larger
populations can be grown for initial selection, as
less space is required to raise small seedlings
than mature plants. Whorled phyllotaxy and
resistance to damping-off are two traits that may
be selected just after emergence of the embryo
from the soil. Early selection for vigor,
hardiness, resistance, and general growth form may
be made when the seedlings are from 30 to 90
centimeters (1 to 3 feet) tall. Leaf type, height,
and branching are other criteria for early
selection. These early-selected plants cannot be
bred until they mature, but selection is the
primary and most important step in plant
improvement.
Whorled phyllotaxy is associated
with subsequent anomalies in the growth cycle
(i.e., multiple leaflets and flattened or clubbed
stems). Also, most whorled plants are staminate
and whorled phyllotaxy may be
sex-linked.
3. Leaf Traits
Leaf traits vary greatly from
strain to strain. In addition to these regularly
occurring variations in leaves, there are a number
of mutations and possible traits in leaf shape. It
may turn out that leaf shape is correlated with
other traits in Cannabis. Broad leaflets might be
associated with a low calyx-to-leaf ratio and
narrow leaflets might be associated with a high
calyx-to-leaf ratio. If this is the case, early
selection of seedlings by leaflet shape could
determine the character of the flowering clusters
at harvest. Both compound and webbed leaf
variations seem to be hereditary, as are general
leaf characteristics. A breeder may wish to
develop a unique leaf shape for an ornamental
strain or increase leaf yield for pulp
production.
A peculiar leaf mutation was
reported from an F1-Colombian plant in which two
leaves on the plant, at the time of flowering,
developed floral clusters of 5-10 pistil late
calyxes at the intersection of the leaflet array
and the petiole attachment, on the adaxial (top)
side of the leaf. One of these clusters developed
a partial staminate flower but fertilization was
unsuccessful. It is unknown if this mutation is
hereditary.
From Afghanistan, another example
has been observed with several small floral
clusters along the petioles of many of the large
primary leaves.
4. Fiber Traits
More advanced breeding has
occurred in fiber strains than any other type of
Cannabis. Over the years many strains have been
developed with improved maturation, in creased
fiber content, and improved fiber quality as
regards length, strength, and suppleness.
Extensive breeding programs have been carried on
in France, Italy, Russia, and the United States to
develop better varieties of fiber Cannabis. Tall
limbless strains that are monoecious are most
desirable. Monoeciousness is favored, because in
dioecious populations the staminate plants will
mature first and the fibers will become brittle
before the pistillate plants are ready for
harvest. The fiber strains of Europe are divided
into northern and southern varieties. The latter
require higher temperatures and a longer
vegetative period and as a result grow taller and
yield more fiber.
5. Floral
Traits
Many individual traits determine
the floral characteristics of Cannabis This
section will focus on the individual traits of
pistillate floral clusters with occasional
comments about similar traits in staminate floral
clusters. Pistillate flowering clusters are the
seed-producing organs of Cannabis; they remain on
the plant and go through many changes that cannot
be compared to staminate plants.
a) Shape - The basic shape of a
floral cluster is determined by the internode
lengths along the main floral axis and within
individual floral clusters. Dense, long clusters
result when internodes are short along a long
floral axis and there are short internodes within
the individual compact floral clusters (Hindu
Kush). Airy clusters result when a plant forms a
stretched floral axis with long internodes between
well-branched individual floral clusters
(Thailand).
The shape of a floral cluster is
also determined by the general growth habit of the
plant. Among domestic Cannabis phenotypes, for
instance, it is obvious that floral clusters from
a creeper phenotype plant will curve upwards at
the end, and floral clusters from the huge upright
phenotype will have long, straight floral clusters
of various shapes. Early in the winter, many
strains begin to stretch and cease calyx
production in preparation for rejuvenation and sub
sequent vegetative growth in the spring. Staminate
plants also exhibit variation in floral clusters.
Some plants have tight clusters of staminate
calyxes resembling inverted grapes (Hindu Kush)
and others have long, hanging groups of flowers on
long, exposed, leafless branches
(Thailand).
b) Form - The form of a floral
cluster is determined by the numbers and relative
proportions of calyxes and flowers. A leafy floral
cluster might be 70% leaves and have a
calyx-to-leaf ratio of 1-to-4. It is obvious that
strains with a high calyx-to-leaf ratio are more
adapted to calyx production, and therefore, to
resin production. This factor could be
advantageous in characterizing plants as future
parents of drug strains. At this point it must be
noted that pistillate floral clusters are made up
of a number of distinct parts. They include stems,
occasional seeds, calyxes, inner leaves subtending
calyx pairs (small, resinous, 1-3 leaflets), and
outer leaves subtending entire floral clusters
(larger, little resin, 3-11 leaflets). The ratios
(by dry weight) of these various portions vary by
strain, degree of pollination, and maturity of the
floral clusters. Maturation is a reaction to
environmental change, and the degree of maturity
reached is subject to climatic limits as well as
breeder's preference. Because of this interplay
between environment and genetics in the control of
floral form it is often difficult to breed
Cannabis for floral characteristics. A thorough
knowledge of the way a strain matures is important
in separating possible inherited traits of floral
clusters from acquired traits. Chapter IV,
Maturation and Harvesting of Cannabis, delves into
the secrets and theories of maturation. For now,
we will assume that the following traits are
described from fully mature floral clusters (peak
floral stage) before any decline.
c) Calyx Size - Mature calyxes
range in size from 2 to 12 millimeters (1/16 to
3/8 inch) in length. Calyx size is largely
dependent upon age and maturity. Calyx size of a
floral cluster is best expressed as the average
length of the mature viable calyxes. Calyxes are
still considered viable if both pistils appear
fresh and have not begun to curl or change colors.
At this time, the calyx is relatively straight and
has not begun to swell with resin and change shape
as it will when the pistils die. It is generally
agreed that the production of large calyxes is
often as important in deter mining the
psychoactivity of a strain as the quantity of
calyxes produced. Hindu Kush, Thai, and Mexican
strains are some of the most psychoactive strains,
and they are often characterized by large calyxes
and seeds.
Calyx size appears to be an
inherited trait in Cannabis. Completely
acclimatized hybrid strains usually have many
rather small calyxes, while imported strains with
large calyxes retain that size when
inbred.
Initial selection of large seeds
increases the chance that offspring will be of the
large-calyx variety. Aberrant calyx development
occasionally results in double or fused calyxes,
both of which may set seed. This phenomenon is
most pronounced in strains from Thailand and
India.
d) Color - The
perception and interpretation of color in Cannabis
floral clusters is heavily influenced by the
imagination of the cultivator or breeder. A gold
strain does not appear metallic any more than a
red strain resembles a fire engine. Cannabis
floral clusters are basically green, but changes
may take place later in the season which alter the
color to include various shades. The intense green
of chlorophyll usually masks the color of
accessory pigments, Chlorophyll tends to break
down late in the season and anthocyanin pigments
also contained in the tissues are unmasked and
allowed to show through. Purple, resulting from
anthocyanin accumulation, is the most common color
in living Cannabis, other than green. This color
modification is usually triggered by seasonal
change, much as the leaves of many deciduous trees
change color in the fall. This does not mean,
however, that expression of color is controlled by
environment alone and is not an inheritable trait.
For purple color to develop upon maturation, a
strain must have the genetically controlled
metabolic potential to pro duce anthocyanin
pigments coupled with a responsiveness to
environmental change such that anthocyanin
pigments are unmasked and become visible. This
also means that a strain could have the genes for
expression of purple color but the color might
never be expressed if the environmental conditions
did not trigger anthocyanin pigmentation or
chlorophyll breakdown. Colombian and Hindu Kush
strains often develop purple coloration year after
year when subjected to low night temperatures
during maturation. Color changes will be discussed
in more detail in Chapter IV-Maturation and
Harvesting of Cannabis.
Carotenoid pigments are largely
responsible for the yellow, orange, red, and brown
colors of Cannabis. They also begin to show in the
leaves and calyxes of certain strains as the
masking green chlorophyll color fades upon
maturation. Gold strains are those which tend to
reveal underlying yellow and orange pigments as
they mature. Red strains are usually closer to
reddish brown in color, although certain
carotenoid and anthocyanin pigments are nearly red
and localized streaks of these colors occasionally
appear in the petioles of very old floral
clusters. Red color in pressed, imported tops is
often a result of masses of reddish brown dried
pistils.
Several different portions of
floral cluster anatomy may change colors, and it
is possible that different genes may control the
coloring of these various parts.
The petioles, adaxial (top)
surfaces, and abaxial (bot tom) surfaces of
leaves, as well as the stems, calyxes, and pistils
color differently in various strains. Since most
of the outer leaves are removed during manicuring,
the color ex pressed by the calyxes and inner
leaves during the late flowering stages will be
all that remains in the final product. This is why
strains are only considered to be truly purple or
gold if the calyxes maintain those colors when
dried. Anthocyanin accumulation in the stems is
sometimes considered a sign of phosphorus
deficiency but in most situations results from
unharmful excesses of phosphorus or it is a
genetic trait. Also, cold temperatures might
interfere with phosphorus uptake resulting in a
deficiency. Pistils in Hindu Kush strains are
quite often magenta or pink in color when they
first appear. They are viable at this time and
turn reddish brown when they wither, as in most
strains. Purple coloration usually indicates that
pistillate plants are over-mature and cannabinoid
biosynthesis is slowing down during cold autumn
weather.
e) Cannabinoid Level - Breeding
Cannabis for cannabinoid level has been
accomplished by both licensed legitimate and
clandestine researchers. Warmke (1942) and Warmke
and Davidson (1943-44) showed that they could
significantly raise or lower the cannabinoid level
by selective breeding. Small (1975a) has divided
genus Cannabis into four distinct chemotypes based
on the relative amounts of THC and CBD. Recent
research has shown that crosses between high THC:
low CBD strains and low THC: high CBD strains
yield offspring of cannabinoid content
intermediate between the two parents. Beutler and
der Marderosian (1978) analyzed the F1 offspring
of the controlled cross C. Sativa (Mexico-high
THC) X C. ruderalis (Russia-low THC) and found
that they fell into two groups intermediate
between the parents in THC level. This indicates
that THC production is most likely controlled by
more than one gene. Also the F1 hybrids of lower
THC (resembling the staminate parent) were twice
as frequent as the higher THC hybrids (resembling
the pistillate parent). More re search is needed
to learn if THC production in Cannabis is
associated with the sexual type of the high THC
parent or if high THC characteristics are
recessive. According to Small (1979) the
cannabinoid ratios of strains grown in northern
climates are a reflection of the cannabinoid ratio
of the pure, imported, parental strain. This
indicates that cannabinoid phenotype is
genetically controlled, and the levels of the
total cannabinoids are determined by environment.
Complex highs produced by various strains of drug
Cannabis may be blended by careful breeding to
produce hybrids of varying psychoactivity, but the
level of total psychoactivity is dependent on
environment. This is also the telltale indication
that unconscious breeding with undesirable low-THC
parents could rapidly lead to the degeneration
rather than improvement of a drug strain. It is
obvious that individuals of fiber strains are of
little if any use in breeding drug
strains.
Breeding for
cannabinoid content and the eventual
characterization of varying highs produced by
Cannabis is totally subjective guesswork without
the aid of modern analysis techniques. A
chromatographic analysis system would allow the
selection of specific cannabinoid types,
especially staminate pollen parents. Selection of
staminate parents always presents a problem when
breeding for cannabinoid content. Staminate plants
usually express the same ratios of cannabinoids as
their pistiliate counterparts but in much lower
quantities, and they are rarely allowed to reach
full maturity for fear of seeding the pistillate
portion of the crop. A simple bioassay for THC
content of staminate plants is performed by
leaving a series of from three to five numbered
bags of leaves and tops of various prospective
pollen parents along with some rolling papers in
several locations frequented by a steady repeating
crowd of cannabis smokers. The bag completely
consumed first can be considered the most
desirable to smoke and possibly the most
psychoactive. It would be impossible for one per
son to objectively select the most psychoactive
staminate plant since variation in the cannabinoid
profile is subtle. The bioassay reported here is
in effect an unstructured panel evaluation which
averages the opinions of unbiased testers who are
exposed to only a few choices at a time. Such
bioassay results can enter into selecting the
staminate parent.
It is difficult to say how many
genes might control THC-acid synthesis. Genetic
control of the biosynthetic pathway could occur at
many points through the action of enzymes
controlling each individual reaction. It is
generally accepted that drug strains have an
enzyme system which quickly converts CBD-acid to
THC-acid, favoring THC-acid accumulation. Fiber
strains lack this enzyme activity, so CBD-acid
accumulalion is favored since there is little con
version to THC-acid. These same enzyme systems are
probably also sensitive to changes in heat and
light.
It is supposed that variations in
the type of high associated with different strains
of Cannabis result from varying levels of
cannabinoids. THC is the primary psycho active
ingredient which is acted upon synergistically by
small amounts of CBN, CBD, and other accessory
cannabinoids. Terpenes and other aromatic
constituents of Cannabis might also potentiate or
suppress the effect of THC. We know that
cannabinoid levels may be used to establish
cannabinoid phenotypes and that these phenotypes
are passed on from parent to offspring. Therefore,
cannabinoid levels are in part determined by
genes. To accurately characterize highs from
various individuals and establish criteria for
breeding strains with particular cannabinoid
contents, an accurate and easy method is needed
for measuring cannabinoid levels in prospective
parents. Inheritance and expression of cannabinoid
chemotype is certainly complex.
f) Taste and Aroma - Taste and
aroma are closely linked.
As our senses for differentiating
taste and aroma are connected, so are the sources
of taste and aroma in Cannabis. Aroma is produced
primarily by aromatic terpenes produced as
components of the resin secreted by glandular
trichomes on the surface of the calyxes and
subtending leaflets. When a floral cluster is
squeezed, the resinous heads of glandular
trichomes rupture and the aromatic terpenes are
exposed to the air. There is often a large
difference between the aroma of fresh and dry
floral clusters. This is explained by the
polymerization (joining together in a chain) of
many of the smaller molecules of aromatic terpenes
to form different aromatic and nonaromatic terpene
polymers. This happens as Cannabis resins age and
mature, both while the plant is growing and while
curing after harvest. Additional aromas may
interfere with the primary terpenoid components,
such as ammonia gas and other gaseous products
given off by the curing, fermentation or spoilage
of the tissue (non-resin) portion of the floral
clusters.
A combination of at least twenty
aromatic terpenes (103 are known to occur in
Cannabis) and other aromatic compounds control the
aroma of each plant. The production of each
aromatic compound may be influenced by many genes;
therefore, it is a complex matter to breed
Cannabis for aroma. Breeders of perfume roses
often are amazed at the complexity of the genetic
control of aroma, Each strain, however, has
several characteristic aromas, and these are
occasionally transmitted to hybrid offspring such
that they resemble one or both parents in aroma.
Many times breeders complain that their strain has
lost the de sired aromatic characteristics of the
parental strains. Fixed hybrid strains will
develop a characteristic aroma that is hereditary
and often true-breeding. The cultivator with
preservation of a particular aroma as a goal can
clone the individual with a desired aroma in
addition to breeding it. This is good insurance in
case the aroma is lost in the off spring by
segregation and recombination of genes.
The aromas of fresh or dried
clusters are sampled and compared in such a way
that they are separated to avoid confusion. Each
sample is placed in the corner of a twice-folded,
labeled piece of unscented writing paper at room
temperature (above 650). A light squeeze will
release the aromatic principles contained within
the resin exuded by the ruptured glandular
trichome head. When sampling, never squeeze a
floral cluster directly, as the resins will ad
here to the fingers and bias further sampling. The
folded paper conveniently holds the floral
cluster, avoids confusion during sampling, and
contains the aromas as a glass does in wine
tasting.
Taste is easily sampled by loosely
rolling dried floral clusters in a cigarette paper
and inhaling to draw a taste across the tongue.
Samples should be approximately the same
size.
Taste in
Cannabis is divided into three categories
according to usage: the taste of the aromatic
components carried by air that passes over the
Cannabis when it is in haled without being
lighted; the taste of the smoke from burning
Cannabis; and the taste of Cannabis when it is
consumed orally. These three are separate
entities.
The terpenes contained in a taste
of unlighted Cannabis are the same as those sensed
in the aroma, but perceived through the sense of
taste instead of smell. Orally ingested Cannabis
generally tastes bitter due to the vegetative
plant tissues, but the resin is characteristically
spicy and hot, somewhat like cinnamon or pepper.
The taste of Cannabis smoke is determined by the
burning tissues and vaporizing terpenes. These
terpenes may not be detected in the aroma and
unlighted taste.
Biosynthetic relationships between
terpenes and cannabinoids have been firmly
established. Indeed, cannabinoids are synthesized
within the plant from terpene precursors. It is
suspected that changes in aromatic terpene levels
parallel changes in cannabinoid levels during
maturation. As connections between aroma and
psycho activity are uncovered, the breeder will be
better able to make field selections of
prospective high-THC parents without complicated
analysis.
g) Persistence of Aromatic
Principles and Cannabinoids - Cannabis resins
deteriorate as they age, and the aromatic
principles and cannabinoids break down slowly
until they are hardly noticeable. Since fresh
Cannabis is only available once a year in
temperate regions, an important breeding goal has
been a strain that keeps well when packaged.
Packageability and shelf life are important
considerations in the breeding of fresh fruit
species and will prove equally important if trade
in Cannabis develops after
legalization.
h) Trichome Type - Several types
of trichomes are present on the epidermal surfaces
of Cannabis. Several of these trichomes are
glandular and secretory in nature and are divided
into bulbous, capitate sessile, and capitate
stalked types. Of these, the capitate stalked
glandular trichomes are apparently responsible for
the intense secretion of cannabinoid laden resins.
Plants with a high density of capitate stalked
trichomes are a logical goal for breeders of drug
Cannabis. The number and type of trichomes is
easily characterized by observation with a small
hand lens (lOX to 50X). Recent research by V. P.
Soroka (1979) concludes that a positive
correlation exists between the number of glandular
trichomes on leaves and calyxes and the various
cannabinoid contents of the floral clusters. In
other words, many capitate stalked trichomes means
higher THC levels.
i) Resin Quantity and Quality -
Resin production by the glandular trichomes
varies. A strain may have many glandular trichomes
but they may not secrete very much resin. Resin
color also varies from strain to strain. Resin
heads may darken and become more opaque as they
mature, as suggested by several authors. Some
strains, however, pro duce fresh resins that are
transparent amber instead of clear and colorless,
and these are often some of the most psycho active
strains. Transparent resins, regardless of color,
are a sign that the plant is actively carrying out
resin biosynthesis. When biosynthesis ceases,
resins turn opaque as cannabinoid and aromatic
levels decline. Resin color is certainly an
indication of the conditions inside the resin
head, and this may prove to be another important
criterion for breeding.
j) Resin Tenacity - For years
strains have been bred for hashish production.
Hashish is formed from detached resin heads. In
modern times it might be feasible to breed a
strain with high resin production that gives up
its precious covering of resin heads with only
moderate shaking, rather than the customary
flailing that also breaks up the plant. This would
facilitate hashish production. Strains that are
bred for use as cannabis would benefit from
extremely tenacious resin heads that would not
fall off during packaging and
shipment.
k) Drying and
Curing Rate - The rate and extent to which
Cannabis dries is generally determined by the way
it is dried, but, all conditions being the same,
some strains dry much more rapidly and completely
than others. It is assumed that resin has a role
in preventing desiccation and high resin content
might retard drying. However, it is a
misconception that resin is secreted to coat and
seal the surface of the calyxes and leaves. Resin
is secreted by glandular trichomes, but they are
trapped under a cuticle layer surrounding the head
cells of the trichome holding the resin away from
the surface of the leaves. There it would rarely
if ever have a chance to seal the surface of the
epidermal layer and prevent the transpiration of
water. It seems that an alternate reason must be
found for the great variations in rate and extent
of drying. Strains may be bred that dry and cure
rapidly to save valuable time.
1) Ease of Manicuring - One of the
most time-consuming aspects of commercial drug
Cannabis production is the seemingly endless chore
of manicuring, or removing the larger leaves from
the floral clusters. These larger outer leaves are
not nearly as psychoactive as the inner leaves and
calyxes, so they are usually removed before
selling as cannabis. Strains with fewer leaves
obviously require less time to manicure. Long
petioles on the leaves facilitate removal by hand
with a small pair of scissors. If there is a
marked size difference between very large outer
leaves and tiny, resinous inner leaves it is
easier to manicure quickly because it is easier to
see which leaves to remove.
m) Seed Characteristics - Seeds
may be bred for many characteristics including
size, oil content, and protein con tent. Cannabis
seed is a valuable source of drying oils, and
Cannabis-seed cake is a fine feed for ranch
animals. Higher-protein varieties may be developed
for food. Also, seeds are selected for rapid
germination rate.
n) Maturation - Cannabis strains
differ greatly as to when they mature and how they
respond to changing environment. Some strains,
such as Mexican and Hindu Kush, are famous for
early maturation, and others, such as Colombian
and Thai, are stubborn in maturing and nearly
always finish late, if at all. Imported strains
are usually characterized as either early,
average, or late in maturing; however, a
particular strain may produce some individuals
which mature early and others which mature late.
Through selection, breeders have, on the one hand,
developed strains that mature in four weeks,
outdoors under temperate conditions; and on the
other hand, they have developed green house
strains that mature in up to four months in their
protected environment. Early maturation is
extremely advantageous to growers who live in
areas of late spring and early fall freezes.
Consequently, especially early-maturing plants are
selected as parents for future early-maturing
strains.
o) Flowering - Once a plant
matures and begins to bear flowers it may reach
peak floral production in a few weeks, or the
floral clusters may continue to grow and develop
for several months. The rate at which a strain
flowers is independent of the rate at which it
matures, so a plant may wait until late in the
season to flower and then grow extensive, mature
floral clusters in only a few weeks.
p) Ripening - Ripening of Cannabis
flowers is the final step in their maturation
process Floral clusters will usually mature and
ripen in rapid succession, but sometimes large
floral clusters will form and only after a period
of apparent hesitation will the flowers begin to
produce resin and ripen. Once ripening starts it
usually spreads over the entire plant, but some
strains, such as those from Thailand, are known to
ripen a few floral clusters at a time over several
months. Some fruit trees are similarly everbearing
with a yearlong season of production. Possibly
Cannabis strains could be bred that are true
everbearing perennials that continue to flower and
mature consistently all year long.
q) Cannabinoid Profile - It is
supposed that variations in the type of high
associated with different strains of Cannabis
result from varying levels of cannabinoids. THC is
the primary psychoactive ingredient which is acted
upon synergistically by small amounts of CBN, CBD,
and other accessory cannabinoids. We know that
cannabinoid levels may be used to establish
cannabinoid phenotypes and that these phenotypes
are passed on from parent to offspring. Therefore,
cannabinoid levels are in part determined by
genes. To accurately characterize highs from
various individuals and establish criteria for
breeding strains with particular cannabinoid
contents, an accurate and easy method is necessary
for measuring cannabinoid levels in prospective
parents.
Various
combinations of these traits are possible and
inevitable. The traits that we most often see are
most likely dominant and any effort to alter
genetics and improve Cannabis strains are most
easily accomplished by concentrating on the major
phenotypes for the most important traits. The best
breeders set high goals of a limited scope and
adhere to their ideals.
6. Gross Phenotypes of Cannabis
Strains
The gross phenotype or general
growth form is deter mined by size, root
production, branching pattern, sex, maturation,
and floral characteristics. Most imported
varieties have characteristic gross phenotypes
although there tend to be occasional rare examples
of almost every phenotype in nearly every variety.
This indicates the complexity of genetic control
determining gross phenotype. Hybrid crosses
between imported pure varieties were the beginning
of nearly every domestic strain of Cannabis. In
hybrid crosses, some dominant characteristics from
each parental variety are exhibited in various
combinations by the F1 offspring. Nearly all of
the offspring will resemble both parents and very
few will resemble only one parent. This sounds
like it is saying a lot, but this F1 hybrid
generation is far from true-breeding and the
subsequent F2 generation will exhibit great
variation, tending to look more like one or the
other of the original imported parental varieties,
and will also exhibit recessive traits not
apparent in either of the original parents. If the
F1 offspring are desirable plants it will be
difficult to continue the hybrid traits in
subsequent generations. Enough of the original F1
hybrid seeds are produced so they may be used year
after year to pro-duce uniform crops of desirable
plants.
Phenotypes and
Characteristics
of Imported
Strains
Following is a list of gross
phenotypes and characteristics for many imported
strains of Cannabis.
1. Fiber Strain Gross Phenotypes
(hemp types)
2. Drug Strain Gross
Phenotypes
a) Colombia - highland, lowland
(cannabis)
b) Congo - (cannabis)
c) Hindu Kush - Afghanistan and
Pakistan (hashish)
d) Southern India - (ganja
cannabis)
e) Jamaica - Carribean
hybrids
f) Kenya - Kisumu (dagga
cannabis)
g) Lebanon - (hashish)
h) Malawi, Africa - Lake Nyasa
(dagga cannabis)
i) Mexico - Michoacan, Oaxaca,
Guerrero (cannabis)
j) Morocco - Rif mountains (kif
cannabis and hashish)
h) Nepal - wild (ganja cannabis
and hashish)
1) Russian - ruderalis
(uncultivated)
m) South Africa - (dagga
cannabis)
n) Southeast Asia - Cambodia,
Laos, Thailand, Vietnam (ganja
cannabis)
3. Hybrid Drug
Phenotypes
a) Creeper Phenotype
b) Huge Upright
Phenotype
In general the F1 and F2 pure-bred
offspring of these imported varieties are more
similar to each other than they are to other
varieties and they are termed pure
strains.
However, it should be remembered
that these are average. Gross phenotypes and
recessive variations within each trait will occur.
In addition, these representations are based on
unpruned plants growing in ideal conditions and
stress will alter the gross phenotype. Also, the
protective environment of a greenhouse tends to
obscure the difference between different strains.
This section presents information that is used in
the selection of pure strains for
breeding.
1. Fiber Strain Gross Phenotypes
Fiber strains are characterized as tall, rapidly
maturing, limbless plants which are often
monoecious. This growth habit has been selected by
generations of fiber-producing farmers to
facilitate forming long fibers through even growth
and maturation. Monoecious strains mature more
evenly than dioecious strains, and fiber crops are
usually not grown long enough to set seed which
interferes with fiber production. Most varieties
of fiber Cannabis originate in the northern
temperate climates of Europe, Japan, China and
North America. Several strains have been selected
from the prime hemp growing areas and offered
commercially over the last fifty years in both
Europe and America. Escaped fiber strains of the
midwestern United States are usually tall, skinny,
relatively poorly branched, weakly flowered, and
low in cannabinoid production. They represent an
escaped race of Cannabis sativa hemp. Most fiber
strains contain CBD as the primary cannabinoid and
little if any THC.
2. Drug Strain Gross Phenotypes
Drug strains are characterized by Delta1-THC as
the primary cannabinoid, with low levels of other
accessory cannabinoids such as THCV, CBD, CBC,
and CBN. This results from selective
breeding for high potency or natural selection in
niches where Delta1-THC biosynthesis favors
survival.
a) Colombia - (0 to 10 north latitude)
Colombian Cannabis originally could be divided
into two basic strains: one from the low-altitude
humid coastal areas along the Atlantic near
Panama, and the other from the more arid mountain
areas inland from Santa Marta. More recently, new
areas of cultivation in the interior plateau of
southern central Colombia and the highland valleys
stretching southward from the Atlantic coast have
become the primary areas of commercial export
Cannabis cultivation. Until recent years high
quality Cannabis was available through the black
market from both coastal and highland Colombia.
Cannabis was introduced to Colombia just over 100
years ago, and its cultivation is deeply rooted in
tradition. Cultivation techniques often involve
transplanting of selected seedlings and other
individual attention. The production of "la mona
amarilla" or gold buds is achieved by girdling or
removing a strip of bark from the main stem of a
nearly mature plant, thereby restricting the flow
of water, nutrients, and plant products. Over
several days the leaves dry up and fall off as the
flowers slowly die and turn yellow. This produces
the highly prized "Colombian gold" so prevalent in
the early to middle 1970s (Partridge 1973). Trade
names such as "punta roja" (red tips [pistils] ),
"Cali Hills," "choco," "lowland," "Santa Marta
gold," and "purple" give us some idea of the color
of older varieties and the location of
cultivation.
In response to an incredible demand by America
for Cannabis, and the fairly effective control of
Mexican Cannabis importation and cultivation
through tightening border security and the use of
Paraquat, Colombian farmers have geared up their
operations. Most of the cannabis smoked in America
is imported from Colombia. This also means that
the largest number of seeds available for domes
tic cultivation also originate in Colombia.
Cannabis agri-business has squeezed out all but a
few small areas where labor-intensive cultivation
of high quality drug Cannabis such as "Ia mona
amarilla" can continue. The fine cannabis of
Colombia was often seedless, but commercial grades
are nearly always well seeded. As a rule today,
the more remote highland areas are the centers of
commercial agriculture and few of the small
farmers remain. It is thought that some highland
farmers must still grow fine Cannabis, and
occasional connoisseur crops surface. The older
seeds from the legendary Colombian strains are now
highly prized by breeders. In the heyday of
"Colombian gold" this fine cerebral cannabis was
grown high in the mountains. Humid lowland
cannabis was characterized by stringy, brown,
fibrous floral clusters of sedative narcotic high.
Now highland cannabis has become the commercial
product and is characterized by leafy brown floral
clusters and sedative effect. Many of the
unfavorable characteristics of imported Colombian
Cannabis result from hurried commercial
agricultural techniques combined with poor curing
and storage. Colombian seeds still contain genes
favoring vigorous growth and high THC production.
Colombian strains also contain high levels of CBD
and CBN, which could account for sedative highs
and result from poor curing and storage
techniques. Domestic Colombian strains usually
lack CBD and CBN. The commercial Cannabis market
has brought about the eradication of some local
strains by hybridizing with commercial
strains.
Colombian strains appear as
relatively highly branched conical plants with a
long upright central stem, horizontal limbs and
relatively short internodes. The leaves are
characterized by highly serrated slender leaflets
(7-11) in a nearly complete to overlapping
circular array of varying shades of medium green.
Colombian strains usually flower late in temperate
regions of the northern hemisphere and may fail to
mature flowers in colder climates. These strains
favor the long equatorial growing seasons and
often seem insensitive to the rapidly decreasing
daylength during autumn in temperate latitudes.
Because of the horizontal branching pattern of
Colombian strains and their long growth cycle,
pistillate plants tend to produce many flowering
clusters along the entire length of the stem back
to the central stalk. The small flowers tend to
produce small, round, dark, mottled, and brown
seeds. Imported and domestic Colombian Cannabis
often tend to be more sedative in psychoactivity
than other strains. This may be caused by the
synergistic effect of THC with higher levels of
CBD or CBN. Poor curing techniques on the part of
Colombian farmers, such as sun drying in huge
piles resembling com post heaps, may form CBN as a
degradation product of THC. Colombian strains tend
to make excellent hybrids with more rapidly
maturing strains such as those from Central and
North America.
b) Congo - (5 north to 5 south latitude)
Most seeds are collected from shipments of
commercial grade seeded floral clusters appearing
in Europe.
c) Hindu Kush Range - Cannabis indica
(Afghanistan and Pakistan) - (30 to 37 north
latitude)
This strain from the foothills (up to 3,200
meters [10,000 feetj) of the Hindu Kush range is
grown in small rural gardens, as it has been for
hundreds of years, and is used primarily for the
production of hashish. In these areas hashish is
usually made from the resins covering the pistil
late calyxes and associated leaflets. These resins
are re moved by shaking and crushing the flowering
tops over a silk screen and collecting the dusty
resins that fall off the plants. Adulteration and
pressing usually follow in the production of
commercial hashish. Strains from this area are
often used as type examples for Cannabis indica.
Early maturation and the belief by clandestine
cultivators that this strain may be exempt from
laws controlling Cannabis sativa and indeed may be
legal, has resulted in its proliferation
throughout domestic populations of "drug"
Cannabis. Names such as "hash plant" and "skunk
weed" typify its acrid aroma reminiscent of
"primo" hashish from the high valleys near
Mazar-i-Sharif, Chitral, and Kandahar in
Afghanistan and Pakistan.
This strain is characterized by short, broad
plants with thick, brittle woody stems and short
internodes. The main stalk is usually only four to
six feet tall, but the relatively unbranched
primary limbs usually grow in an upright fashion
until they are nearly as tall as the central stalk
and form a sort of upside-down conical shape.
These strains are of medium size, with dark green
leaves having 5 to 9 very wide, coarsely serrated
leaflets in a circular array. The lower leaf
surface is often lighter in color than the upper
surface. These leaves have so few broad coarse
leaflets that they are often compared to a maple
leaf. Floral clusters are dense and appear along
the entire length of the primary limbs as very
resinous leafy balls. Most plants produce
flowering clusters with a low calyx-to-leaf ratio,
but the inner leaves associated with the calyxes
are usually liberally encrusted with resin. Early
maturation and extreme resin production is
characteristic of these strains. This may be the
result of acclimatization to northern temperate
latitudes and selection for hashish production.
The acrid smell associated with strains from the
Hindu Kush appears very early in the seedling
stage of both staminate and pistillate individuals
and continues throughout the life of the plant.
Sweet aromas do often develop but this strain
usually loses the sweet fragrance early, along
with the clear, cerebral psychoactivity.
Short stature, early maturation, and high resin
production make Hindu Kush strains very desirable
for hybridizing and indeed they have met with
great popularity. The gene pool of imported Hindu
Kush strains seems to be dominant for these
desirable characteristics and they seem readily
passed on to the F1 hybrid generation. A fine
hybrid may result from crossing a Hindu Kush
variety with a late-maturing, tall, sweet strain
from Thailand, India, or Nepal. This produces
hybrid offspring of short stature, high resin
content, early maturation, and sweet taste that
will mature high quality flowers in northern
climates. Many hybrid crosses of this type are
made each year and are currently cultivated in
many areas of North America. Hindu Kush seeds are
usually large, round, and dark grey or black in
coloring with some mottling.
d) India Centra1 Southern -
Kerala, Mysore, and Madras regions (10 to 20 north
latitude)
Ganja (or flowering Cannabis tops) has been
grown in India for hundreds of years. These
strains are usually grown in a seedless fashion
and are cured, dried, and smoked as cannabis
instead of being converted to hashish as in many
Central Asian areas. This makes them of
considerable interest to domestic Cannabis
cultivators wishing to reap the benefits of years
of selective breeding for fine ganja by Indian
farmers. Many Europeans and Americans now live in
these areas of India and ganja strains are finding
their way into domestic American Cannabis
crops.
Ganja strains are often tall and broad with a
central stalk up to 12 feet tall and spreading
highly-branched limbs. The leaves are medium green
and made up of 7 to 11 leaf lets of moderate size
and serration arranged in a circular array. The
frond-like limbs of ganja strains result from
extensive compound branching so that by the time
floral clusters form they grow from tertiary or
quaternary limbs. This promotes a high yield of
floral clusters which in ganja strains tend to be
small, slender, and curved. Seeds are usually
small and dark. Many spicy aromas and tastes occur
in Indian ganja strains and they are extremely
resinous and psychoactive. Medicinal Cannabis of
the late 1800s and early 1900s was usually Indian
ganja.
e) Jamaica - (18 north latitude)
Jamaican strains were not uncommon in the late
1960s and early 1970s but they are much rarer
today. Both green and brown varieties are grown in
Jamaica. The top-of-the-line seedless smoke is
known as the "lamb's bread" and is rarely seen
outside Jamaica. Most purported Jamaican strains
appear stringy and brown much like low land or
commercial Colombian strains. Jamaica's close
proximity to Colombia and its position along the
routes of cannabis smuggling from Colombia to
Florida make it likely that Colombian varieties
now predominate in Jamaica even if these varieties
were not responsible for the original Jamaican
strains. Jamaican strains resemble Colombian
strains in leaf shape, seed type and general
morphology but they tend to be a little taller,
thinner, and lighter green. Jamaican strains
produce a psychoactive effect of a particularly
clear and cerebral nature, unlike many Colombian
strains. Some strains may also have come to
Jamaica from the Caribbean coast of Mexico, and
this may account for the introduction of cerebral
green strains.
f) Kenya - Kisumu (5 north to 5 south
latitude)
Strains from this area have thin leaves and
vary in color from light to dark green. They are
characterized by cerebral psychoactivity and sweet
taste. Hermaphrodites are common.
g) Lebanon - (34 north latitude)
Lebanese strains are rare in domestic Cannabis
crops but do appear from time to time. They are
relatively short and slender with thick stems,
poorly developed limbs, and wide, medium-green
leaves with 5 to 11 slightly broad leaflets. They
are often early-maturing and seem to be quite
leafy, reflecting a low calyx-to-leaf ratio. The
calyxes are relatively large and the seeds
flattened, ovoid and dark brown in color. As with
Hindu Kush strains, these plants are grown for the
production of screened and pressed hashish, and
the calyx-to-leaf ratio may be less important than
the total resin production for hashish making.
Lebanese strains resemble Hindu Kush varieties in
many ways and it is likely that they are
related.
h) Malawi, Africa - (10 to 15 south
latitude)
Malawi is a small country in eastern central
Africa bordering Lake Nyasa. Over the past few
years Cannabis from Malawi has appeared wrapped in
bark and rolled tightly, approximately four ounces
at a time. The nearly seedless flowers are spicy
in taste and powerfully psycho active.
Enthusiastic American and European Cannabis
cultivators immediately planted the new strain and
it has be come incorporated into several domestic
hybrid strains. They appear as a dark green, large
plant of medium height and strong limb growth. The
leaves are dark green with coarsely serrated,
large, slender leaflets arranged in a narrow,
drooping, hand-like array. The leaves usually lack
serrations on the distal (tip portion) 20% of each
leaflet. The mature floral clusters are sometimes
airy, resulting from long internodes, and are made
up of large calyxes and relatively few leaves. The
large calyxes are very sweet and resinous, as well
as extremely psychoactive. Seeds are large,
shortened, flattened, and ovoid in shape with a
dark grey or reddish brown, mottled perianth or
seed coat. The caruncle or point of attachment at
the base of the seed is uncommonly deep and
usually is surrounded by a sharp edged lip. Some
individuals turn a very light yellow green in the
flowering clusters as they mature under exposed
conditions. Although they mature relatively late,
they do seem to have met with acceptance in Great
Britain and North America as drug strains. Seeds
of many strains appear in small batches of
low-quality African cannabis easily available in
Amsterdam and other European cities. Phenotypes
vary considerably, however, many are similar in
appearance to strains from Thailand.
i) Mexico - (15 to 27 north
latitude)
Mexico had long been the
major source of cannabis smoked in America until
recent years. Efforts by the border patrols to
stop the flow of Mexican cannabis into the United
States were only minimally effective and many
varieties of high quality Mexican drug Cannabis
were continually available. Many of the hybrid
strains grown domestic ally today originated in
the mountains of Mexico. In recent years, however,
the Mexican government (with monetary backing by
the United States) began an intensive pro gram to
eradicate Cannabis through the aerial spraying of
herbicides such as Paraquat. Their program was
effective, and high quality Mexican Cannabis is
now rarely available. It is ironic that the NIMH
(National Institute of Mental Health) is using
domestic Mexican Cannabis strains grown in
Mississippi as the pharmaceutical research product
for chemotherapy and glaucoma patients. In the
prime of Mexican cannabis cultivation from the
early 1960s to the middle 1970s, strains or
"brands" of Cannabis were usually affixed with the
name of the state or area where they were grown.
Hence names like "Chiapan," "Guerreran,"
"Nayarit," "Michoacan," "Oaxacan," and "Sinaloan"
have geo graphic origins behind their common names
and mean something to this very day. All of these
areas are Pacific coastal states extending in
order from Sinaloa in the north at 27; through
Nayarit, Jalisco, Michoacan, Guerrero, and Oaxaca;
to Chiapas in the south at 15 - All of these
states stretch from the coast into the mountains
where Cannabis is grown.
Strains from Michoacan, Guerrero, and Oaxaca
were the most common and a few comments may be
ventured about each and about Mexican strains in
general.
Mexican strains are thought of as tall, upright
plants of moderate to large size with light to
dark green, large leaves. The leaves are made up
of long, medium width, moderately serrated
leaflets arranged in a circular array. The plants
mature relatively early in comparison to strains
from Colombia or Thailand and produce many long
floral clusters with a high calyx-to-leaf ratio
and highly cerebral psychoactivity. Michoacan
strains tend to have very slender leaves and a
very high calyx-to-leaf ratio as do Guerreran
strains, but Oaxacan strains tend to be
broader-leafed, often with leafier floral
clusters. Oaxacan strains are generally the
largest and grow vigorously, while Michoacan
strains are smaller and more delicate. Guerreran
strains are often short and develop long, upright
lower limbs. Seeds from most Mexican strains are
fairly large, ovoid, and slightly flattened with a
light colored grey or brown, unmottled perianth.
Smaller, darker, more mottled seeds have appeared
in Mexican cannabis during recent years. This may
indicate that hybridization is taking place in
Mexico, possibly with introduced seed from the
largest seed source in the world, Colombia. No
commercial seeded Cannabis crops are free from
hybridization and great variation may occur in the
offspring. More recently, large amounts of hybrid
domestic seed have been introduced into Mexico. It
is not uncommon to find Thai and Afghani
phenotypes in recent shipments of Cannabis from
Mexico.
j) Morocco, Rif Mountains - (35 north
latitude)
The Rif mountains are located in northernmost
Morocco near the Mediterranean Sea and range up to
2,500 meters (8,000 feet). On a high plateau
surrounding the city of Ketama grows most of the
Cannabis used for kif floral clusters and hashish
production. Seeds are broad-sown or scattered on
rocky terraced fields in the spring, as soon as
the last light snows melt, and the mature plants
are harvested in late August and September. Mature
plants are usually 1 to 2 meters (4 to 6 feet)
tall and only slightly branched. This results from
crowded cultivation techniques and lack of
irrigation. Each pistillate plant bears only one
main terminal flower cluster full of seeds. Few
staminate plants, if any, are pulled to prevent
pollination. Although Cannabis in Morocco was
originally cultivated for floral clusters to be
mixed with tobacco and smoked as kif, hashish
production has begun in the past 30 years due to
Western influence. In Morocco, hashish is
manufactured by shaking the entire plant over a
silk screen and collecting the powdery resins that
pass through the screen. It is a matter of
speculation whether the original Moroccan kif
strains might be extinct. It is reported that some
of these strains were grown for seedless flower
production and areas of Morocco may still exist
where this is the tradition.
Because of selection for hashish production,
Moroccan strains resemble both Lebanese and Hindu
Kush strains in their relatively broad leaves,
short growth habit, and high resin production.
Moroccan strains are possibly related to these
other Cannabis indica types.
k) Nepal - (26 to 30 north latitude)
Most Cannabis in Nepal
occurs in wild stands high in the Himalayan
foothills (up to 3,200 meters [10,000 feet]).
Little Cannabis is cultivated, and it is from
select wild plants that most Nepalese hashish and
cannabis originate. Nepalese plants are usually
tall and thin with long, slightly branched limbs.
The long, thin flowering tops are very aromatic
and reminiscent of the finest fresh "temple ball"
and "finger" hashish hand-rubbed from wild plants.
Resin production is abundant and psychoactivity is
high Few Nepalese strains have appeared in
domestic Cannabis crops but they do seem to make
strong hybrids with strains from domestic sources
and Thailand.
I) Russian - (35 to 60 north latitude) Cannabis
ruderalis (uncultivated)
Short stature (10 to 50 centimeters [3 to 18
inches]) and brief life cycle (8 to 10 weeks),
wide, reduced leaves and specialized seeds
characterize weed Cannabis of Russia. Janischewsky
(1924) discovered weedy Cannabis and named it
Cannabis ruderalis. Ruderalis could prove valuable
in breeding rapidly maturing strains for
commercial use in temperate latitudes. It flowers
when approximately 7 weeks old without apparent
dependence on daylength. Russian Cannabis
ruderalis is nearly always high in CBD and low in
THC.
m) South Africa - (22 to 35 south latitude)
Dagga of South Africa is highly acclaimed. Most
seeds have been collected from cannabis shipments
in Europe. Some are very early-maturing (September
in northern latitudes) and sweet smelling. The
stretched light green floral clusters and sweet
aroma are comparable to Thai strains.
n) Southeast Asia - Cambodia, Laos, Thailand
and Vietnam (10 to 20 north latitude)
Since American troops first returned from the
war in Vietnam, the Cambodian, Laotian, Thai, and
Vietnamese strains have been regarded as some of
the very finest in the world. Currently most
Southeast Asian Cannabis is produced in northern
and eastern Thailand. Until recent times, Cannabis
farming has been a cottage industry of the
northern mountain areas and each family grew a
small garden. The pride of a farmer in his crop
was reflected in the high quality and seedless
nature of each carefully wrapped Thai stick. Due
largely to the craving of Americans for exotic
cannabis, Cannabis cultivation has become a big
business in Thailand and many farmers are growing
large fields of lower quality Cannabis in the
eastern lowlands. It is suspected that other
Cannabis strains, brought to Thailand to replenish
local strains and begin large plantations, may
have hybridized with original Thai strains and
altered the resultant genetics. Also, wild stands
of Cannabis may now be cut and dried for
export.
Strains from Thailand are characterized by tall
meandering growth of the main stalk and limbs and
fairly extensive branching. The leaves are often
very large with 9 to 11 long, slender, coarsely
serrated leaflets arranged in a drooping hand like
array. The Thai refer to them as "alligator tails"
and the name is certainly appropriate.
Most Thai strains are very late-maturing and
subject to hermaphrodism. It is not understood
whether strains from Thailand turn hermaphrodite
as a reaction to the extremes of northern
temperate weather or if they have a genetically
controlled tendency towards hermaphrodism. To the
dismay of many cultivators and researchers, Thai
strains mature late, flower slowly, and ripen
unevenly. Retarded floral development and apparent
disregard for changes in photoperiod and weather
may have given rise to the story that Cannabis
plants in Thailand live and bear flowers for
years. Despite these shortcomings, Thai strains
are very psychoactive and many hybrid crosses have
been made with rapidly maturing strains, such as
Mexican and Hindu Kush, in a successful attempt to
create early-maturing hybrids of high
psychoactivity and characteristic Thai sweet,
citrus taste. The calyxes of Thai strains are very
large, as are the seeds and other anatomical
features, leading to the misconception that
strains may be polyploid. No natural polyploidy
has been discovered in any strains of Cannabis
though no one has ever taken the time to look
thoroughly. The seeds are very large, ovoid,
slightly flattened, and light brown or tan in
color. The perianth is never mottled or striped
except at the base. Greenhouses prove to be the
best way to mature stubborn Thai strains in
temperate climes.
3. Hybrid Drug Phenotypes
a) Creeper Phenotype - This phenotype has
appeared in several domestic Cannabis crops and it
is a frequent phenotype in certain hybrid strains.
It has not yet been deter mined whether this trait
is genetically controlled (dominant or recessive),
but efforts to develop a true-breeding strain of
creepers are meeting with partial success. This
phenotype appears when the main stalk of the
seedling has grown to about 1 meter (3 feet) in
height. It then begins to bend at approximately
the middle of the stalk, up to 700 from the
vertical, usually in the direction of the sun. Sub
sequently, the first limbs sag until they touch
the ground and begin to grow back up. In extremely
loose mulch and humid conditions the limbs will
occasionally root along the bottom surface.
Possibly as a result of increased light exposure,
the primary limbs continue to branch once or
twice, creating wide frond-like limbs of buds
resembling South Indian strains. This phenotype
usually produces very high flower yields. The
leaves of these creeper phenotype plants are
nearly always of medium size with 7-11 long,
narrow, highly serrated leaflets.
b) Huge Upright Phenotype - This phenotype is
characterized by medium size leaves with narrow,
highly serrated leaflets much like the creeper
strains, and may also be an acclimatized North
American phenotype. In this phenotype, however, a
long, straight central stalk from 2 to 4 meters
(6.5 to 13 feet) tall forms and the long, slender
primary limbs grow in an upright fashion until
they are nearly as tall or occasionally taller
than the central stalk. This strain resembles the
Hindu Kush strains in general shape, except that
the entire domestic plant is much larger than the
Hindu Kush with long, slender, more highly
branched primary limbs, much narrower leaflets,
and a higher calyx-to-leaf ratio. These huge
upright strains are also hybrids of many different
imported strains and no specific origin may be
determined.
The preceding has been a listing of gross
phenotypes for several of the many strains of
Cannabis occurring world wide. Although many of
them are rare, the seeds appear occasionally due
to the extreme mobility of American and European
Cannabis enthusiasts. As a consequence of this
extreme mobility, it is feared that many of the
world's finest strains of Cannabis have been or
may be lost forever due to hybridization with
foreign Cannabis populations and the
socio-economic displacement of Cannabis cultures
worldwide. Collectors and breeders are needed to
preserve these rare and endangered gene pools
before it is too late.
Various combinations of these traits are
possible and inevitable. The traits that we most
often see are most likely dominant and the
improvement of Cannabisstrains through breeding is
most easily accomplished by concentrating on the
dominant phenotypes for the most important traits.
The best breeders set high goals of limited scope
and ad here to their ideals.
Chapter
4 - Maturation and Harvesting of
Cannabis
To everything there is a season,
and a time to every purpose under heaven:
A
time to be born, and a time to die;
a time to
plant, and a time to pluck up
that which is
planted,
- Ecciesiastes 3:1-2
Maturation
The maturation of Cannabis is
normally annual and its timing is influenced by
the age of the plant, changes in photoperiod, and
other environmental conditions. When a plant
reaches an adequate age for flowering (about two
months) and the nights lengthen following the
summer solstice (June 21-22), flowering begins.
This is the triggering of the reproductive phase
of the life cycle which is followed by senescence
and eventual death. The leaves of Cannabisplants
form fewer leaflets during flowering until the
floral clusters are formed of trileaflet and
mono-leaflet leaves. This is a reversal of the
heteroblastic (variously shaped) trend of
increased leaflet number through the pre-floral
stage.
The staminate and pistillate sexes
of the same strain mature at different rates.
Staminate plants are usually the first to begin
flowering and releasing pollen. In fact, much
pollen is released when the pistillate plants show
only a few pairs of primordial flowers. It would
seem more effective for the staminate plant to
release pollen when the pistillate plants are in
heavy flower to ensure good seed production. Upon
deeper investigation, however, it becomes obvious
that early pollination is advantageous to
survival. Pollinations that take place early form
seeds that ripen in the warm days of summer when
the pistillate plant is healthy and there is less
chance of frost damage or predation by herbivores.
If conditions are favorable, the staminate plant
will continue to produce pollen for some time and
will also fertilize many new pistillate flowers as
they appear. After a month or more of shedding
pollen the staminate plants enter senescence. This
period is marked by the yellowing and dropping of
the foliage leaves, followed by diminished flower
and pollen production. Eventually, all the leaves
drop, and the spent, lifeless stamens hang in the
breeze until fungi and bacteria return them to the
soil.
Pistillate plants continue to
develop up to three months longer as they mature
seeds. As the calyxes of the first flowers to be
pollinated dry out, each releases a single seed
which falls to the ground. Since new pistillate
flowers are continually produced and fertilized,
there are nearly always seeds ranging in maturity
from freshly fertilized ovules to large, dark,
mature seeds. In this way the plant is able to
take advantage of favorable conditions throughout
several months. The effectiveness of this type of
reproduction is demonstrated by the spread of
escaped Cannabis strains in the midwestern United
States. In these areas Can nabis abounds and
multiplies each year, through the timely
dehiscence of millions of pollen grains and the
fertilization of thousands of pistillate flowers,
resulting in thousands of viable seeds from each
pistillate plant. As the pistillate plant
senesces, the leaves turn yellow and drop, along
with the remaining mature seeds. The rest of the
plant eventually dies and decomposes.
Although the staminate plants
begin to release pollen before the pistillate
plant has begun to form floral clusters,
pistillate plants actually differentiate sexually
and form a few viable flowers long before most of
the staminate plants begin to release pollen. This
ensures that the first pollen released has a
chance to fertilize at least a few flowers and
produce seeds. The production of prominent pistils
makes pistillate plants the first to be
recognizable in a crop, so early selection of
seed-parents is quite easy. Often the primordia of
staminate plants first appear as vegetative growth
at the nodes along the main stalk and do not
differentiate flowers for several weeks.
Pistillate plants also may develop vegetative
growth in place of the usual primordial calyxes
and this growth makes staminate plants
indistinguishable from pistillate plants for some
time. This is often frustrating to sinsemilla
Cannabis cultivators, since the staminate plants
that are hesitant to differentiate sex take up
valuable space that could be utilized by
pistillate plants. Also, juvenile pistillate
plants are occasionally mistaken for staminate
plants if they are slow to form calyxes, since
vegetative growth at the nodes could appear to be
staminate primordia.
Latitude and Photoperiod
Change in photoperiod is the
factor that usually triggers the developmental
stages of Cannabis. Photoperiod and seasonal
cycles are determined by latitude. The most even
photoperiods and mildest seasonal variations are
found near the equator, and the most widely
fluctuating photoperiods and most radical seasonal
variations are found in polar and high altitude
locations. Areas in intermediate latitudes show
more pronounced seasonal variation depending on
their distance from the equator or height in
altitude. A graph of light cycles based on
latitude is helpful in exploring the maturation
and cycles of Cannabis from various latitudes and
the genetic adaptations of strains to their native
environments.
The wavy lines follow the changes
in photoperiod (daylength) for two years at
various latitudes. Follow, for example, the
photoperiod for 400 north latitude (Northern
California) which begins along the left-hand
margin with a 15-hour photoperiod on June 21
(summer solstice). As the months progress to the
right, the days get shorter and the line
representing photoperiod slopes downward. During
July the daylength decreases to 14 hours and
Cannabis plants begin to flower and produce THC.
(Increased THC production is represented by an
increase in the size of the dots along the line of
photoperiod.) As the days get shorter the plants
flower more profusely and produce more THC until a
peak period is reached during October and
November. After this time the photoperiod drops
below 10 hours and THC production slows. High-THC
plants may continue to develop until the winter
solstice (shortest day of the year, around
December 21) if they are protected from frost. At
this point a new vegetative light cycle starts and
THC production ceases. New seedlings are planted
when the days begin to get long (12-14 hours) and
warm from March to May. Farther north at 600
latitude the day-length changes more radically and
the growing season is shorter. These conditions do
not favor THC production.
Light cycles and seasons vary as
one approaches the equator. Near 200 north
latitude (Hawaii, India, and Thailand where most
of the finest drug Cannabisoriginates), the
photoperiod never varies out of the range critical
for THC production, between 10 and 14 hours. The
light cycle at 200 north latitude starts at the
summer solstice when the photoperiod is just a
little over 13 hours. This means that a long
season exists that starts earlier and finishes
later than at higher latitudes. However, because
the photoperiod is never too long to induce
flowering, Cannabis may also be grown in a short
season from December through March or April (90 to
120 days). Strains from these latitudes are often
not as responsive to photoperiod change, and
flowering seems strongly age-determined as well as
light determined. Most strains of Cannabis will
begin to flower when they are 60 days old if
photoperiod does not exceed 13 hours. At 200
latitude, the photoperiod never exceeds 14 hours,
and easily induced strains may begin flowering at
nearly any time during the year.
Equatorial areas gain and lose
daylength twice during the year as the sun passes
north and south of the equator, resulting in two
identical photoperiodic seasons. Rainfall snd
altitude determine the growing season of each
area, but at some locations along the equator it
is possible to grow two crops of fully mature
Cannabis in one year. By locating a particular
latitude on the chart, and noting local dates for
the last and first frosts and wet and dry seasons,
the effective growing season may be determined. If
an area has too short an effective growing season
for drug Cannabis, a greenhouse or other shelter
from cold, rainy conditions is used. The timing of
planting and length of the growing season in these
marginal conditions can also be determined from
this chart.
For instance, assume a researcher
wishes to grow a crop of Cannabis near Durban,
South Africa, at 300 south latitude. Consulting
the graph of maturation cycles will reveal that a
long-photoperiod season, adequate for the
maturation of drug Cannabis, exists from October
through June. Local weather conditions indicate
that average temperature ranges from 60~ to 80~ F.
and annual precipitation from 30 to 50 inches.
Early storms from the east in June could damage
plants and some sort of storm protection might be
necessary. Any estimates made from this chart sre
generally accurate for photoperiod; however, local
weather conditions are always taken into
account.
Combination and simplification of
the earth's climatic bands where Cannabisis grown
yields an equatorial zone, north and south
subtropical zones, north and south temperate
zones, arctic and antarctic zones. A discussion of
the maturation cycle for drug Cannabis in each
zone follows.
Equatorial Zone - (15 south
latitude to 15 north latitude)
At the equator the sun is high in
the sky all year long. The sun is directly
overhead twice a year at the equinoxes, March 22
and September 22, as it passes to the north and
then the south. The days get shortest twice a year
on each equinox. As a result, the equatorial zone
has two times during the year when floral
induction can take place and two distinct seasons,
These seasons may overlap but they are usually
five to six months long and unless the weather
forbids, the fields may be used twice a year.
Colombia, southern India, Thailand, and Malawi all
lie on the fringes of the equatorial zone between
10 and 15 latitude. It is interesting to note that
few if any areas of commercial Cannabis
cultivation, other than Colombia, lie within the
heart of the equatorial zone. This could be
because most areas along the equator or very near
to it are extremely humid at lower altitudes, so
it may be impossible to find a dry enough place to
grow one crop of Cannabis, much less two. Wild
Cannabisoccurs in many equatorial areas but it is
of relatively low quality for fiber or drug
production. Under cultivation, however, equatorial
Cannabis has great potential for drug
production.
Northern and Southern Subtropical
Zones - (15 to 30 north and south
latitudes)
The northern subtropical zone is
one of the largest Cannabis producing areas in the
world, while the southern subtropical zone has
little Cannabis. These areas usually have a long
season from February-March through
October-December in the northern hemisphere and
from September-October through March-June in the
southern hemisphere. A short season may also exist
from December or January through March or April in
the northern hemisphere, spanning from 90 to 120
days. In Hawaii, Cannabis cultivators sometimes
make use of a third short season from June through
September or September through December, but these
short seasons actually break up the long
subtropical season during which some of the
world's most potent Cannabis is grown. Southeast
Asia, Hawaii, Mexico, Jamaica, Pakistan, Nepal,
and India are all major Cannabis-producing areas
located in the northern subtropical
zone.
North and South Temperate Zones -
(30 to 60 north and south latitudes)
The temperate zones have one
medium to long season stretching from March-May
through September-December in the northern
hemisphere and from September-November through
March-June in the southern hemisphere. Central
China, Korea, Japan, United States, southern
Europe, Morocco, Turkey, Lebanon, Iran,
Afghanistan, Pakistan, India, and Kashmir are all
in the north temperate zone. Many of these nations
are producers of large amounts of fiber as well as
drug Cannabis. The south temperate zone includes
only the southern portions of Australia, South
America, and Africa. Some Cannabis grows in all
three of these areas, but none of them are well
known for the cultivation of drug
Cannabis.
Arctic and Antarctic Zones - (60
to 70 north and south latitudes)
The arctic and antarctic zones are
characterized by a short, harsh growing season
that is not favorable for the growth of Cannabis,
The arctic season begins during the very long days
of June or July, as soon as the ground thaws, and
continues until the first freezes of September or
October. The photoperiod is very long when the
seedlings appear, but the days rapidly get shorter
and by September the plants begin to flower.
Plants often get quite large in these areas, but
they do not get a long enough season to mature
completely and the cultivation of drug Cannabis is
not practical without a greenhouse. Parts of
Russia, Alaska, Canada, and northern Europe are
within the arctic zone and only small stands of
escaped fiber and drug Cannabis grow naturally.
Cultivated drug strains are grown in Alaska,
Canada, and northern Europe in limited quantities
but little is grown on a commercial scale. Rapidly
maturing, acclimatized hybrid strains from
temperate North America are probably the best
suited for growth in this area. Fiber strains also
grow well in some arctic areas. Breeding programs
with Russian Cannabis ruderalis could yield very
short season drug strains.
It becomes readily apparent that
most of the drug Cannabis occurs in the northern
subtropical and northern temperate zones of the
world. It is striking that there are many
unutilized areas suitable for the cultivation of
drug Cannabis the world over. It is also readily
apparent that the equatorial zone and subtropical
zones have the advantage of an extra full or
partial season for the cultivation of
Cannabis.
Strains that have become adapted
to their native latitude will tend to flower and
mature under domestic cultivation in much the same
pattern as they would in their native conditions.
For example, in northern temperate areas, strains
from Mexico (subtropical zone) will usually
completely mature by the end of October while
strains from Colombia (equatorial zone) will
usually not mature until December. By
understanding this, strains may be selected from
latitudes similar to the area to be cultivated so
that the chances of growing drug Cannabis to
maturity are maximized. The short season of
Hawaii, Mexico, and other subtropical areas
constitutes a separate set of environmental
factors (distinct from the long season) that
influence genotype and favor selection of a
separate short-season strain. The maturation
characteristics can vary greatly between these two
strains because of the length of the season and
differences in response to photoperiod. For that
reason, it is usually necessary to determine if
Hawail and California strains have been bred
specifically for either the short or long season,
or if they are used indiscriminately for both
seasons. Sometimes the only information available
is what season the ~1 seed plant was grown. It may
not be practical to grow a long-season strain from
Hawaii in a temperate growing area, but a short
season strain might do very
well.
Moon Cycles
Since ancient times man has
observed the effect of the moon on living
organisms, especially his crops. Planting and
harvest dates based on moon cycles are still found
in the Old Farmer's Almanac. The moon takes 28 to
29 days to completely orbit the earth. This cycle
is divided into four one-week phases. It starts as
the new moon waxes (begins to enlarge) for a week
until the quarter moon and another week until the
moon is full. Then the waning (shrinking) cycle
begins and the moon passes back for two weeks
through another quarter to reach the beginning of
the cycle with a new moon. Most cultivators agree
that the best time for planting is on the waxing
moon, and the best time to harvest is on the
waning moon. Exact new moons, full moons, and
quarter moons are avoided as these are times of
interplanetary stress. Planting, germinating,
grafting, and layering are most favored during
phases 1 and 2. The best time is a few days before
the full moon. Phases 3 and 4 are most beneficial
for harvesting and pruning.
Root growth seems accelerated at
the time of the new moon, possibly as a response
to increased gravitational pull from the alignment
of sun and moon. It also seems that floral cluster
formation is slowed by the full moon. Strong, full
moonlight is on the borderline of being enough
light to cease floral induction entirely. Although
this never happens, if a plant is just about to
begin floral growth, it may be delayed a week by a
few nights of bright moonlight.
Conversely, plants begin floral
growth during the dark nights of the new moon.
More research is needed to explain the mysterious
effects of moon cycles on
Cannabis
Floral Maturation
The individual pistillate calyxes
and the composite floral clusters change as they
mature. External changes indicate that internal
biochemical metabolic changes are also occurring.
When the external changes can be connected with
the invisible internal metabolic changes, then the
cultivator is in a better position to decide when
to har vest floral clusters. With years of
experience this becomes intuition, but there are
general correlations which can put the process in
more objective terms.
The calyxes first appear as
single, thin, tubular, green sheaths surrounding
an ovule at the basal attached end with a pair of
thin white, yellowish green, or purple pistils
attached to the ovule and protruding from the tip
fold of the calyx. As the flower begins to age and
mature, the pistils grow longer and the calyx
enlarges slightly to its full length. Next, the
calyx begins to swell as resin secretion
increases, and the pistils reach their peak of
reproductive ripeness. From this point on, the
pistils begin to swell and darken slightly, and
the tips may begin to curl and turn reddish brown.
At this stage the pistillate flower is past its
reproductive peak, and it is not likely that it
will produce a viable seed if pollinated. Without
pollination the calyx begins to swell almost as if
it had been fertilized and resin secretion reaches
a peak. The pistils eventually wither and turn a
reddish or orange brown. By this time, the swollen
calyx has accumulated an incredible layer of
resin, but secretion has slowed and few fresh
terpenes and cannabinoids are being produced.
Falling pistils mark the end of the developmental
cycle of the individual pistillate calyx. The
resins turn opaque and the calyx begins to
die.
The biosynthesis of cannabinoids
and terpenes parallels the developmental stages of
the calyx and associated resin-producing glandular
trichomes. Also, the average developmental stage
of the accumulated individual calyxes determines
the maturational state of the entire floral
cluster. Thus, determination of maturational stage
and timing of the harvest is based on the average
calyx and resin condition, along with general
trends in morphology and development of the plant
as a whole.
The basic morphological
characteristics of floral maturation are measured
by calyx-to-leaf ratio and internode length within
floral clusters. Calyx-to-leaf ratios are highest
during the peak floral stage. Later stages are
usually characterized by decreased calyx growth
and increased leaf growth. Internode length is
usually very short between pairs of calyxes in
tight dense clusters. At the end of the maturation
cycle, if there is still growth, the internode
length may increase in response to increased
humidity and lowered light conditions. This is
most often a sign that the floral clusters are
past their reproductive peak; if so, they are
preparing for rejuvenation and the possibility of
re-growth the following season. At this time
nearly all resin secretion has ceased at temperate
latitudes (due to low temperatures), but may still
continue in equatorial and subtropical areas that
have a longer and warmer growing season.
Greenhouses have been used in temperate latitudes
to simulate tropical environments and extend the
period of resin production. It should be
remembered that greenhouses also tend to cause a
stretched condition in the floral clusters in
response to high humidity, high temperatures,
lowered light intensity, and restricted air
circulation.
Simulation of the native
photoperiod of a certain strain is achieved
through the use of blackout curtains and
supplemental lighting in a greenhouse or indoor
environment. The localized light cycle particular
to a strain may be estimated from the graph of
maturation patterns at various latitudes (p.124).
In this way it is possible to reproduce exotic
foreign environments to more accurately study
Cannabis, Tight clusters of calyxes and leaves are
characteristic of ripe outdoor Cannabis. Some
strains, however, such as those from Thailand,
tend to have longer internodes and appear airy and
stretched. This seems to be a genetically
controlled adaptation to their native environment.
Imported examples from Thailand also have long
internodes in the pistillate floral clusters. Thai
strains may not develop tight floral clusters even
in the most arid and exposed conditions; however,
this condition is furthered as rejuvenation begins
during autumn days of decreasing
photoperiod.
Cannabinoid Biosynthesis
Since resin secretion and
associated terpenoid and cannabinoid biosynthesis
are at their peak just after the pistils have
begun to turn brown but before the calyx stops
growing, it seems obvious that floral clusters
should be harvested during this time. More subtle
variations in terpenoid and cannabinoid levels
also take place within this period of maximum
resin secretion, and these variations influence
the nature of the resin's psychoactive
effect.
The cannabinoid ratios
characteristic of a strain are primarily
determined by genes, but it must be remembered
that many environmental factors, such as light,
temperature, and humidity, influence the path of a
molecule along the cannabinoid biosynthetic
pathway. These environmental factors can cause an
atypical final cannabinoid profile (cannabinoid
levels and ratios). Not all cannabinoid molecules
begin their journey through the pathway at the
same time, nor do all of them complete the cycle
and turn into THC molecules simultaneously. There
is no magical way to influence the cannabinoid
biosynthesis to favor THC production, but certain
factors involved in the growth and maturation of
Cannabis do affect final cannabinoid levels, These
factors may be controlled to some extent by proper
selection of mature floral clusters for
harvesting, agricul tural technique, and local
environment. In addition to genetic and seasonal
influences, the picture is further modified by the
fact that each individual calyx goes through the
cannabinoid cycle fairly independently and that
during peak periods of resin secretion new flowers
are produced every day and begin their own cycle.
This means that at any given time the ratio of
calyx-to-leaf, the average calyx condition, the
condition of the resins, and resultant cannabinoid
ratios indicate which stage the floral cluster has
reached. Since it is difficult for the amateur
cultivator to determine the cannabinoid profile of
a floral cluster without chromatographic analysis,
this discussion will center on the known and
theoretical correlations between the external
characteristics of calyx and resin and internal
cannabinoid profile. A better understanding of
these subtle changes in cannabinoid ratios may be
gleaned by observing the cannabinoid biosynthesis.
Focus on the lower left-hand corner of the chart.
Next, follow the chain of reactions until you find
the four isomers of THC acid
(tetrahydro-cannabinolic acid), toward the right
side of the page at the crest of the reaction
sequence, and realize that there are several steps
in a long series of reactions that precede and
follow the formation of THC acids, the major
psychoactive cannabinoids. Actually, THC acid and
the other necessary cannabinoid acids are not
psychoactive until they decarboxylate (lose an
acidic carboxyl group [COOHI). It is the
cannabinoid acids which move along the
biosynthetic pathway, and these acids undergo the
strategic reactions that determine the position of
any particular cannabinoid molecule along the
pathway. After the resins are secreted by the
glandular trichome they begin to harden and the
cannabinoid acids begin to decarboxylate. Any
remaining cannabinoid acids are decarboxylated by
heat within a few days after harvesting. Other THC
acids with shorter side-chains also occur in
certain strains of Cannabis. Several are known to
be psychoactive and many more are suspected of
psychoactivity. The shorter propyl (three-carb on)
and methyl (one-carbon) side-chain homologs
(similarly shaped molecules) are shorter acting
than pen tyl (five-carbon) THCs and may account
for some of the quick, flashy effects noted by
some cannabisusers. We will focus on the pentyl
pathway but it should be noted that the propyl and
methyl pathways have homologs at nearly every step
along the pentyl pathway and their synthesis is
basically identical.
The first step in the pentyl
cannabinoid biosynthetic pathway is the
combination of olivetolic acid with geranyl
pyrophosphate. Both of these molecules are derived
from terpenes, and it is readily apparent that the
biosynthetic route of the aromatic terpenoids may
be a clue to formation of the cannabinoids. The
union of these two molecules forms CBG acid
(cannabigerolic acid) which is the basic
cannabinoid precursor molecule. CBG acid may be
converted to CBGM (CBG acid monomethyl ether), or
a hydroxyl group (OH) attaches to the geraniol
portion of the molecule forming hydroxy-CBG acid.
Through the formation of a transition-state
molecule, either CBC acid (cannabichromenic acid)
or CBD acid (cannabidiolic acid) is formed. CBD
acid is the precursor to the THC acids, and,
although CBD is only mildly psychoactive by
itself, it may act with THC to modify the
psychoactive effect of the THC in a sedative way.
CBC is also mildly psychoactive and may interact
synergistically with THC to alter the psychoactive
effect (Turner et al. 1975). Indeed, CBD may
suppress the effect of THC and CBC may potentiate
the effect of THC, although this has not yet been
proven. All of the reactions along the cannabinoid
biosynthetic pathway are enzyme-controlled but are
affected by environmental conditions.
Conversion of CBD acid to THC acid
is the single most important reaction with respect
to psychoactivity in the entire pathway and the
one about which we know the most. Personal
communication with Raphael Mechoulam has centered
around the role of ultraviolet light in the
bio-synthesis of THC acids and minor cannabinoids.
In the laboratory, Mechoulam has converted CBD
acid to THC acids by exposing a solution of CBD
acid in n-hexane to ultraviolet light of 235-285
nm. for up to 48 hours. This reaction uses
atmospheric oxygen molecules (02) and is
irreversible; however, the yield of the conversion
is only about 15% THC acid, and some of the
products formed in the laboratory experiment do
not occur in living specimens. Four types of
isomers or slight variations of THC acids (THCA)
exist. Both Delta1-THCA and Delta6-THCA are
naturally occurring isomers of THCA resulting from
the positions of the double bond on carbon 1 or
carbon 6 of the geraniol portion of the molecule
They have approximately the same psychoactive
effect; however, Delta1-THC acid is about four
times more prevalent than Delta6-THC acid in most
strains. Also Alpha and Beta forms of Delta1-THC
acid and Delta6-THC acid exist as a result of the
juxtaposition of the hydrogen (H) and the carboxyl
(COOH) groups on the olivetolic acid portion of
the molecule It is suspected that the
psychoactivity of the a and ~ forms of the THC
acid molecules probably does not vary, but this
has not been proven. Subtle differences in
psychoactivity not detected in animals by
laboratory instruments, but often discussed by
cannabis aficionados, could be attributed to
additional synergistic effects of the four isomers
of THC acid. Total psycho-activity is attributed
to the ratios of the primary cannabinoids of CBC,
CBD, THC and CBN; the ratios of methyl, propyl,
and pentyl homologs of these cannabinoids; and the
isomeric variations of each of these cannabinoids.
Myriad subtle combinations are sure to exist.
Also, terpenoid and other aromatic compounds might
suppress or potentiate the effects of
THCs.
Environmental conditions influence
cannabinoid biosynthesis by modifying enzymatic
systems and the resultant potency of Cannabis.
High altitude environments are often more arid and
exposed to more intense sunlight than lower
environments. Recent studies by Mobarak et al.
(1978) of Cannabis grown in Afghanistan at 1,300
meters (4,350 feet) elevation show that
significantly more propyl cannabinoids are formed
than the respective pentyl homo-logs. Other
strains from this area of Asia have also exhibited
the presence of propyl cannabinoids, but it cannot
be discounted that altitude might influence which
path of cannabinoid biosynthesis is favored.
Aridity favors resin production and total
cannabinoid production; however, it is unknown
whether arid conditions promote THC production
specifically. It is suspected that increased
ultraviolet radiation might affect cannabinoid
production directly. Ultra-violet light
participates in the biosynthesis of THC acids from
CBD acids, the conversion of CBC acids to CCY
acids, and the conversion of CBD acids to CBS
acids. However, it is unknown whether increased
ultraviolet light might shift cannabinoid
synthesis from pentyl to propyl pathways or
influence the production of THC acid or CBC acid
instead of CBD acid.
The ratio of THC to CBD has been
used in chemotype determination by Small and
others. The genetically determined inability of
certain strains to convert CBD acid to THC acid
makes them a member of a fiber chemotype, but if a
strain has the genetically determined ability to
convert CBD acid to THC acid then it is considered
a drug strain. It is also interesting to note that
Turner and Hadley (1973) discovered an African
strain with a very high THC level and no CBD
although there are fair amounts of CBC acid
present in the strain. Turner* states that he has
seen several strains totally devoid of CBD, but he
has never seen a strain totally devoid of THC.
Also, many early authors confused CBC with CBD in
analyzed samples because of the proximity of their
peaks on gas liquid chromatograph (GLC) results.
If the biosynthetic pathway needs alteration to
include an enzymatically controlled system
involving the direct conversion of hydroxy-CBG
acid to THC acid through allylic rearrangement of
hydroxy-CBG acid and cyclization of the rearranged
intermediate to THC acid, as Turner and Hadley
(1973) suggest, then CBD acid would be bypassed in
the cycle and its absence explained. Another
possibility is that, since CBC acid is formed from
the same symmetric intermediate that is
allylically rearranged before forming CBD acid,
CBC acid may be the accumulated intermediate, the
reaction may be reversed, and through the
symmetric intermediate and the usual allylic
rearrangement CBD acid would be formed but
directly converted to THC acid by a similar enzyme
system to that which reversed the formation of CBC
acid. If this happened fast enough no CBD acid
would be detected. It is more likely, however,
that CBDA in drug strains is converted directly to
THCA as soon as it is formed and no CBD builds up.
Also Turner, Hemphill, and Mahlberg (1978) found
that CBC acid was contained in the tissues of
Cannabis but not in the resin secreted by the
glandular trichomes. In any event, these possible
deviations from the accepted biosynthetic pathway
provide food for thought when trying to decipher
the mysteries of Cannabis strains and varieties of
psychoactive effect.
Returning to the more orthodox
version of the cannabinoid biosynthesis, the role
of ultraviolet light should be reemphasized. It
seems apparent that ultraviolet light, normally
supplied in abundance by sunlight, takes part in
the conversion of CBD acid to THC acids.
Therefore, the lack *Carlton Thrner 1979: personal
communication. of ultraviolet light in indoor
growing situations could account for the limited
psychoactivity of Cannabis grown under artificial
lights. Light energy has been collected and
utilized by the plant in a long series of
reactions resulting in the formation of THC acids.
Farther along the pathway begins the formation of
degradation products not metabolically produced by
the living plant. These cannabinoid acids are
formed through the progressive degradation of THC
acids to CBN acid (cannabinolic acid) and other
cannabinoid acids. The degradation is accomplished
primarily by heat and light and is not
enzymatically controlled by the plant. CBN is also
suspected of synergistic modification of the
psychoactivity of the primary cannabinoids, THCs.
The cannabinoid balance between CBC, CBD, THC, and
CBN is determined by genetics and maturation. THC
production is an ongoing process as long as the
glandular trichome remains active. Variations in
the level of THC in the same trichome as it
matures are the result of THC acid being broken
down to CBN acid while CBD acid is being converted
to THC acid. If the rate of THC biosynthesis
exceeds the rate of THC breakdown, the THC level
in the trichome rises; if the breakdown rate is
faster than the rate of biosynthesis, the THC
level drops. Clear or slightly amber transparent
resin is a sign that the glandular trichome is
still active. As soon as resin secretion begins to
slow, the resins will usually polymerize and
harden. During the late floral stages the resin
tends to darken to a transparent amber color. If
it begins to deteriorate, it first turns
translucent and then opaque brown or white.
Near-freezing temperatures during maturation will
often result in opaque white resins. During active
secretion, THC acids are constantly being formed
from CBD acid and breaking down into CBN
acid.
Harvest Timing
With this dynamic picture of the
biosynthesis and degradation of THC acids as a
frame of reference, the logic behind harvesting at
a specific time is easier to understand. The usual
aim of timing the moment of harvest is to ensure
high THC levels modified by just the proper
amounts of CBC, CBD and CBN, along with their
propyl homologs, to approximate the desired
psychoactive effect. Since THC acids are being
broken down into CBN acid at the same time they
are being made from CBD acid, it is important to
harvest at a time when the production of THC acids
is higher than the degradation of THC acids. Every
experienced cultivator inspects a number of
indicating factors and knows when to harvest the
desired type of floral clus ters. Some like to
harvest early when most of the pistils are still
viable and at the height of reproductive
potential. At this time the resins are very
aromatic and light; the psychoactive effect is
characterized as a light cerebral high (possibly
low CBC and CBD, high THC, low CBN). Others
harvest as late as possible, desiring a stronger,
more resinous cannabischaracterized by a more
intense body effect and an inhibited cerebral
effect (high CBC and CB]), high THC, high CBN).
Harvesting and testing several floral clusters
every few days over a period of several weeks
gives the cultivator a set of samples at all
stages of maturation and creates a basis for
deciding when to harvest in future seasons. The
following is a description of each of the growth
phases as to morphology, terpene aroma, and
relative psychoactivity.
Premature Floral Stage
At this stage floral development
is slightly beyond primordial and only a few
clusters of immature pistillate flowers appear at
the tips of limbs in addition to the primordial
pairs along the main stems. By this stage stem
diameter within the floral clusters is very nearly
maximum. The stems are easily visible between the
nodes and form a strong framework to support
future floral development. Larger vegetative
leaves (5-7 leaflets) predominate and smaller
tri-leaflet leaves are beginning to form in the
new floral axis. A few narrow, tapered calyxes may
be found nestled in the leaflets near the stem
tips and the fresh pistils appear as thin,
feathery, white filaments stretching to test the
surroundings. During this stage the surface of the
calyxes is lightly covered with fuzzy, hair-like,
non-glandular trichomes, but only a few bulbous
and capitate-sessile glandular trichomes have
begun to develop. Resin secretion is minimal, as
indicated by small resin heads and few if any
capitate-stalked, glandular trichomes. There is no
drug yield from plants at the premature stage
since THC production is low, and there is no
economic value other than fiber and leaf. Terpene
production starts as the glandular trichomes begin
to secrete resin; premature floral clusters have
no terpene aromas or tastes. Total cannabinoid
production is low but simple cannabinoid
phenotypes, based on relative amounts of THC and
CBD, may be determined. By the pre-floral stage
the plant has akeady established its basic
chemotype as a fiber or drug strain. A fiber
strain rarely produces more than 2% THC, even
under perfect agricultural conditions. This
indicates that a strain either produces some
varying amount of THC (up to 13%) and little CBD
and is termed a drug strain or produces
practically no THC and high CBD and is termed a
fiber strain, This is genetically
controlled.
The floral clusters are barely
psychoactive at this stage, and most
cannabissmokers classify the reaction as more an
"effect" than a "high." This most likely results
from small amounts of THC as well as trace amounts
of CBC and CBD. CBD production begins when the
seedling is very small. THC production also begins
when the seedling is very small, if the plant
originates from a drug strain. However, THC levels
rarely exceed 2% until the early floral stage and
rarely produce a "high" until the peak floral
stage.
Early Floral Stage
Floral clusters begin to form as
calyx production increases and internode length
decreases. Tri-leaflet leaves are the predominant
type and usually appear along the secondary floral
stems within the individual clusters. Many pairs
of calyxes appear along each secondary floral axis
and each pair is subtended by a tri-leaflet leaf.
Older pairs of calyxes visible along the primary
floral axis during the premature stage now begin
to swell, the pistils darken as they lose
fertility, and some resin secretion is observed in
trichomes along the veins of the calyx. The newly
produced calyxes show few if any capitate-stalked
trichomes. As a result of low resin production,
only a slight terpene aroma and psychoactivity are
detectable. The floral clusters are not ready for
harvest at this point. Total cannabinoid
production has increased markedly over the
premature stage but THC levels (still less than
3%) are not high enough to produce more than a
subtle effect.
Peak Floral Stage
Elongation growth of the main
floral stem ceases at this stage, and floral
clusters gain most of their size through the
addition of more calyxes along the secondary stems
until they cover the primary stem tips in an
overlapping spiral. Small reduced mono-leaflet and
tri-leaflet leaves subtend each pair of calyxes
emerging from secondary stems within the floral
clusters. These subtending leaves are correctly
referred to as bracts. Outer leaves begin to wilt
and turn yellow as the pistillate plant reaches
its reproductive peak. In the primordial calyxes
the pistils have turned brown; however, all but
the oldest of the flowers are fertile and the
floral clusters are white with many pairs of ripe
pistils. Resin secretion is quite advanced in some
of the older infertile calyxes, and the young
pistillate calyxes are rapidly producing
capitate-stalked glandular trichomes to protect
the precious unfertilized ovule. Under wild
conditions the pistillate plant would be starting
to form seeds and the cycle would be drawing to a
close. When Cannabis is grown for sinsemilla
floral production, the cycle is interrupted.
Pistillate plants remain unfertilized and begin to
produce capitate -stalked trichomes and accumulate
resins in a last effort to remain viable. Since
capitate-stalked trichomes now predominate, resin
and THC production increase. The elevated resin
heads appear clear, since fresh resin is still
being secreted, often being produced in the
cellular head of the trichome. At this time THC
acid production is at a peak and CBD acid levels
remain stable as the molecules are rapidly
converted to THC acids, THC acid synthesis has not
been active long enough for a high level of CBN
acid to build up from the degradation of THC acid
by light and heat. Terpene production is also
nearing a peak and the floral clusters are
beautifully aromatic. Many cultivators prefer to
pick some of their strains during this stage in
order to produce cannabis with a clear, cerebral,
psychoactive effect. It is believed that, in peak
floral clusters, the low levels of CBD and CBN
allow the high level of THC to act without their
sedative effects. Also, little polymerization of
resins has occurred, so aromas and tastes are
often less resinous and tar like than at later
stages. Many strains, if they are harvested in the
peak floral stage, lack the completely developed
aroma, taste and psychoactive level that appear
after curing. Cultivators wait longer for the
resins to mature if a different taste and
psychoactive effect is desired.
This is the point of optimum
harvest for some strains, since most additional
calyx growth has ceased. However, a subsequent
flush of new calyx growth may occur and the plant
continue ripening into the late floral
stage.
Late Floral Stage
By this stage plants are well past
the main reproductive phase and their health has
begun to decline. Many of the larger leaves have
dropped off, and some of the small inner leaves
begin to change color. Autumn colors (purple,
orange, yellow, etc.) begin to appear in the older
leaves and calyxes at this time; many of the
pistils turn brown and begin to fall off. Only the
last terminal pistils are still fertile and
swollen calyxes predominate. Heavy layers of
protec tive resin heads cover the calyxes and
associated leaves. Production of additional
capitate-stalked glandular trichomes is rare,
although some existing trichomes may still be
elongating and secreting resins. As the previously
secreted resins mature, they change color. The
polymerization of small terpene molecules (which
make up most of the resin) produces long chains
and a more viscous and darker-colored resin. The
ripening and darkening of resins follows the peak
of psychoactive cannabinoid synthesis and the
transparent amber color of mature resin is usually
indicative of high THC content. Many cultivators
agree that transparent amber resins are a sign of
high-quality drug Cannabis and many of the finest
strains exhibit this characteristic. Particularly
potent Cannabis from California, Hawaii, Thailand,
Mexico, and Colombia is often encrusted with
transparent amber colored instead of clear resin
heads. This is also characteristic of Cannabis
from other equatorial, subtropical and temperate
zones where the growing season is long enough to
accommodate long term resin production and
maturation. Many areas of North America and Europe
have too short a season to fully mature resins
unless a greenhouse is used. Specially
acclimatized strains are another possibility. They
develop rapidly and begin maturing in time to
ripen amber resins while the weather is still warm
and dry.
The weight yield of floral
clusters is usually highest at this point, but
strains may begin to grow an excess of leaves in
late-stage clusters to catch additional energy
from the rapidly diminishing autumn sun. Total
resin accumulation is highest at this stage, but
the period of maximum resin production has passed.
If climatic conditions are harsh, resins and
cannabinoids will begin to decompose. As a result,
resin yield may appear high even if many of the
resin heads are missing or have begun to
deteriorate and the overall psychoactivity of the
resin has dropped. THC decomposes to CBN in the
hot sun and will not remain intact or be replaced
after the metabolic processes of the plant have
ceased. Since cannabinoids are so sensitive to
decomposition by sunlight, the higher
psychoactivity of amber resins may be a secondary
effect. It may be that the THC is better protected
from the sun by amber or opaque resins than by
clear resins. Some late maturing strains develop
opaque, white resin heads as a result of terpene
polymerization and THC decomposition. Opaque resin
heads are usually a sign that the floral clusters
are over-mature.
Late floral clusters exhibit the
full potential of resin production, aromatic
principles, and psychoactive effect. Complex
mixtures of many mon oterpene and sesquiterpene
hydrocarbons along with alcohols, ethers, esters,
and ketones determine the aroma and flavor of
mature Cannabis. The levels of the basic terpenes
and their polymerized by-products fluctuate as the
resin ripens. The aromas of fresh floral clusters
are usually preserved after drying, as by the late
floral stage, a high proportion of ripe resins are
present on the mature calyxes of the fresh plant.
Cannabinoid production favors high THC acid and
rising CBN acid content at this stage, since most
active biosynthesis has ceased and more THC acid
is being broken down into CBN acid than is being
produced from CBD acid. CBD acid may accumulate
because not enough energy is available to complete
its conversion to THC acid. The THC-to-CBD ratio
in the harvested floral clusters certainly begins
to drop as biosynthesis slows, because THC acid
levels decrease as it decom poses, and at the same
time CBD acid levels remain or rise intact since
CBD does not decompose as rapidly as THC acid.
This tends to produce cannabis characterized by
more somatic and sedative effects. Some
cultivators prefer this to the more cerebral and
clear psychoactivity of the peak floral
stage.
Senescence or Rejuvenation Stage
After a pistillate plant finishes
floral maturation, the production of pistillate
calyxes ceases and the plant continues senescence
(decline towards death). In unusual situations,
however, rejuvenation will begin and the plant
will sprout new vegetative growth in preparation
for the following season. Senescence is often
highlighted by striking color changes in the
floral clusters. Leaves, calyxes, and stems
display auxiliary pigments ranging in color from
yellow through red to deep purple. Eventually a
brown shade pre-dominates and death is near. In
warm areas, rejuvenation starts as vegetative
shoots form within the floral clusters. These
shoots are usually made up of unserrated single
leaflets separated by thin stems with long
internodes. It is as if the plant were reaching
for limited winter light. Leaf production is
accelerated as plants reach the rejuvenation
stage, and resin production completely stopped.
Floral clusters left to ripen until the bitter end
usually produce inferior cannabis of lowered THC
level, especially outdoors in bad
weather.
Terpene secretion changes along
with cannabinoid secretion and psychoactive
effect. Various terpenes, terpene polymers, and
other aromatic principles are produced and ripen
at different times in the development of the
plant. If these changes in aromatic principles are
directly correlated with changes in cannabinoid
production, then harvest selections for
cannabinoid level may be possible based on the
aroma of the ripening floral clusters.
It is important to understand
differences in the anatomy of floral clusters for
each Cannabis strain. Trends in the relative
quantity (dry weight) of various parts (such as
leaves, calyxes and trichomes) at various harvest
dates are characteristic of particular strains and
may vary widely. Some generalizations can be made.
In most cases, the percentage of stem weight
steadily decreases as the floral cluster matures.
Rejuvenation growth can account for a sudden
increase in stem percentage. The percentage of
inner leaves usually starts very low and climbs
rapidly as the floral clus ters mature. This often
reflects increased leaf growth near the end of the
season. In many strains the percentage of inner
leaves drops sharply during the peak floral stage
and rises again as calyx production slows and leaf
production increases in the late floral
stage.
Calyx production follows two basic
patterns. In one, the percentage of calyxes climbs
gradually and levels out during the peak floral
stage. It begins to decline in the late floral
stage, and leaf production increases as calyx
production ceases. Other strains continue to
produce calyxes at the expense of leaves, and the
calyx percentage increases steadily throughout
maturation. In both cases, there is some tendency
for calyx percentage to level out during the peak
floral stage irrespective of whether leaf growth
accelerates or calyx growth continues at a later
stage.
Resins generally accumulate
steadily while the plant matures, but strains may
vary as to the stage of peak resin secretion. Seed
percentage increases exponentially with time if
the crop is well fertilized, but most samples of
drug Cannabis grown domestically are nearly
seedless.
To determine dry weight, samples
are harvested, labeled, and air dried until the
central stem of the floral cluster will snap when
bent. In plant research, dry weight is done in
ovens at higher temperatures, but these higher
temperatures would ruin the Cannabis. The dry
floral cluster is weighed. The outer leaves, inner
leaves, calyxes, seeds, and stems are segregated
and each group weighed individually. The
percentage is determined by dividing the
individual dry weights by the total dry
weight.
Calyx percentage ranges from 30 to
70% of the dry weight of the seedless floral
clusters, depending on variety and harvest date.
Inner leaf percentages fluctuate between 15 and
45% of dry weight; stems range from 10 to 30%. It
seems obvious that for drug harvesting a maximum
calyx production is important to quality resin
production. A strain where maximum calyx
production occurs simultaneously with peak resin
production is a breeding goal not yet
attained.
Harvesting Cannabis at the proper
time requires information on how floral clusters
mature and a decision on the part of the
cultivator as to what type of floral clusters are
desired. With harvesting as with other techniques
of cultivation, the path to success is
straightened when a definite goal is established.
Personal preference is always the ultimate
deciding factor.
Factors Influencing THC
Production
Many factors influence the
production of THC. In general, the older a plant,
the greater its potential to produce THC. This is
true, however, only if the plant remains healthy
and vigorous, THC production requires the proper
quantity and quality of light. It seems that none
of the biosynthetic processes operate efficiently
when low light conditions prevent proper
photosynthesis. Research has shown (Valle et al.
1978) that twice as much THC is produced under a
12-hour photoperiod than under a 10-hour
photoperiod. Warm temperatures are known to
promote metabolic activity and the production of
THC. Heat also promotes resin secretion, possibly
in response to the threat of floral desiccation by
the hot sun, Resin collects in the heads of
glandular trichomes and does not directly seal the
pores of the calyx to prevent desiccation. Resin
heads may serve to break up the rays of the sun so
that fewer of them strike the leaf surface and
raise the temperature. However, light and heat
also destroy THC. In a drug strain, a
bio-synthetic rate must be maintained such that
substantially more THC is produced than is broken
down. Humidity is an interesting parameter of THC
production and one of the least understood. Most
high-quality drug Cannabisgrows in areas that are
dry much of the time at least during the
maturation period. It follows that increased resin
produc. tion in response to arid conditions might
account for increased THC production. High-THC
strains, however, also grow in very humid
conditions (greenhouses and equatorial zones) and
produce copious quantities of resin. Cannabis
seems not to produce more resins in response to
dry soil, as it does to a dry atmosphere. Drying
out plants by with-holding water for the last
weeks of flowering does not stimulate THC
production, although an arid atmosphere may do so.
A Cannabis plant in flower requires water, so that
nutrients are available. for operating the various
bio-synthetic pathways.
There is really no confirmed
method of forcing increased THC production. Many
techniques have developed through
misinterpretations of ancient tradition. In
Colombia, farmers girdle the stalk of the main
stem, which cuts off the flow of water and
nutrients between the roots and the shoots. This
technique may not raise the final THC level, but
it does cause rapid maturation and yellow gold
coloration in the floral cluster (Partridge 1973).
Impaling with nails, pine splinters, balls of
opium, and stones are clandestine folk methods of
promoting flowering, taste and THC production.
However none of these have any valid documentation
from the original culture or scientific basis.
Symbiotic relationships between herbs in companion
plantings are known to influence the production of
essential oils. Experiments might be carried out
with different herbs, such as stinging nettles, as
companion plants for Cannabis, in an effort to
stimulate resin production. In the future,
agricultural techniques may be discovered which
specifically promote THC biosynthesis.
In general, it is considered most
important that the plant be healthy for it to
produce high THC levels. The genotype of the
plant, a result of seed selection, is the primary
factor which determines the THC levels. After
that, the provision of adequate organic nutrients,
water, sunlight, fresh air, growing space, and
time for maturation seems to be the key to
producing high-THC Cannabis in all circumstances.
Stress resulting from inadequacies in the
environment limits the true expression of
phenotype and cannabinoid potential. Cannabis
finds a normal adaptive defense in the production
of THC laden resins, and it seems logical that a
healthy plant is best able to raise this defense.
Forcing plants to produce is a perverse ideal and
alien to the principles of organic agriculture.
Plants are not machines that can be worked faster
and harder to produce more. The life processes of
the plant rely on delicate natural balances aimed
at the ultimate survival of the plant until it
reproduces. The most a Cannabis cultivator or
researcher can expect to do is provide all the
requisites for healthy growth and guide the plant
until it matures.
Flowering in Cannabis may be
forced or accelerated by many different
techniques. This does not mean that THC production
is forced, only that the time before and during
flowering is shortened and flowers are produced
rapidly. Most techniques involve the deprivation
of light during the long days of summer to promote
early floral induction and sexual differentiation.
This is sometimes done by moving the plants inside
a completely dark structure for 12 hours of each
24-hour day until the floral clusters are mature.
This stimulates an autumn light cycle and promotes
flowering at any time of the year. In the field,
covers may be made to block out the sun for a few
hours at sunrise or sunset, and these are used to
cover small plants. Photoperiod alteration is most
easily accomplished in a greenhouse, where
blackout curtains are easily rolled over the
plants. Drug Cannabis production requires 11-12
hours of continuous darkness to induce flowering
and at least 10 hours of light for adequate THC
production (Valle et al. 1978). In a greenhouse,
supplemental lighting need be used only to extend
daylength, while the sun supplies the energy
needed for growth and THC biosynthesis. It is not
known why at least 10 hours (and preferably 12 or
13 hours) of light are needed for high THC
production. This is not dependent on accumulated
solar energy since light responses can be
activated and THC production increased with only a
40-watt bulb. A reasonable theory is that a
light-sensitive pigment in the plant (possibly
phytochrome) acts as a switch, causing the plant
to follow the flowering cycle. THC production is
probably associated with the induction of
flowering resulting from the photoperiod
change.
Cool night temperatures seem to
promote flowering in plants that have previously
differentiated sexually. Extended cold periods,
however, cause metabolic processes to slow and
maturation to cease. Most temperate
Cannabisstrains are sensitive to many of the signs
of an approaching fall season and respond by
beginning to flower. In contrast, strains from
tropical areas, such as Thailand, often seem
unresponsive to any signs of fall and never speed
up development.
Contrary to popular thought,
planting Cannabis strains later in the season in
temperate latitudes may actually promote earlier
flowering. Most cultivators believe that planting
early gives the plant plenty of time to flower and
it will finish earlier. This is often not true.
Seedlings started in February or March grow for
4-5 months of increasing photoperiod before the
days begin to get shorter following the solstice
in June. Huge vegetative plants grow and may form
floral inhibitors during the months of long
photo-period. When the days begin to get shorter,
these older plants may be reluctant to flower
because of the floral inhibitors formed in the
pre-floral leaves. Since floral cluster formation
takes 6-10 weeks, the initial delay in flowering
could push the harvest date into November or
December. Cannabis started during the short days
of December or January will often differentiate
sex by March or April. Usually these plants form
few floral clusters and rejuvenate for the long
season ahead. No increased potency has been
noticed in old rejuvenated plants. Plants started
in late June or early July, after the summer
solstice, are exposed only to days of decreasing
photoperiod. When old enough they begin flowering
immediately, possibly because they haven?t built
up as many long-day floral inhibitors. They begin
the 6-10 week floral period with plenty of time to
finish during the warmer days of October. These
later plantings yield smaller plants because they
have a shorter vegetative cycle. This may prove an
advantage. in greenhouse research, where it is
common for plants to grow far too large for easy
handling before they begin to flower. Late
plantings after the summer solstice receive short
inductive photoperiods almost immediately.
However, flowering is delayed into September since
the plant must grow before it is old enough to
flower. Although flowering is delayed, the small
plants rapidly produce copious quantities of
flowers in a final effort to reproduce.
Extremes in nutrient
concentrations are considered influential in both
the sex determination and floral development of
Cannabis. High nitrogen levels in the soil during
the seedling stage seem to favor pistillate
plants, but high nitrogen levels during flowering
often result in delayed maturation and excessive
leafing in the floral clusters. Phosphorus and
potassium are both vital to the floral maturation
of Cannabis. High-phosphorus fertilizers known as
"bloom boosters" are available, and these have
been shown to accelerate flowering in some plants.
However, Cannabis plants are easily burned with
high phosphorus fertilizers since they are usually
very acidic. A safer method for the plant is the
use of natural phosphorus sources, such as
colloidal phosphate, rock phosphate, or bone meal;
these tend to cause less shock in the maturing
plant. They are a source of phosphorus that is
readily available as well as long-term in effect.
Chemical fertilizers sometimes produce floral
clusters with a metallic, salty flavor. Extremes
in nutrient levels usually affect the growth of
the entire plant in an adverse way.
Hormones, such as gibberellic
acid, ethylene, cytokinins and auxins, are readily
available and can produce some strange effects.
They can stimulate flowering in some cases, but
they also stimulate sex reversal. Plant physiology
is not simple, and results are usually
unpredictable.
Harvesting, Drying, and Curing
Cannabis is cultivated for the
harvest of several different commercial products.
Pulp, fiber, seed, drugs, and resin are produced
from various parts of the Cannabis plant. The
methods of harvesting, drying, curing, and storing
various plant parts are determined by the intended
use of the plant. Pulp is made from the leaves of
juvenile plants and from waste products of fiber
and drug production. Fibers are produced from the
stems of the Cannabis plant. The floral clusters
are responsible for the production of seeds,
drugs, and aromatic resins.
If plants are to be used solely as
a pulp source for paper production, they may be
harvested at any point in the life cycle when they
are large enough to produce a reasonable yield of
leaves and small stems. The leaves and small stems
are stripped from the larger stalks, and after
drying they are bailed and stored or made directly
into paper pulp. Cannabis contains approximately
67% cellulose and 16% hemicellulose; this makes a
fine resilient paper. In Italy, the finest Bibles
are printed on hemp paper.
Fiber or hemp Cannabis is usually
grown in large, crowded fields. Crowding of
seedlings results in tall, thin plants with few
limbs and long, straight fibers. The total field
is harvested when the fiber content reaches the
correct level but before the fibers begin to
lignify or harden. The cut stalks are stripped of
leaves and bundled to dry. Fibers are extracted by
natural or chemical retting, Retting is the
breaking down of the outside skin layer and
tissues that join the fibers into bundles, so that
the individual fibers are freed. Natural retting
is accomplished by soaking the stalks in water and
laying them out on the ground, where they are
attacked by decay organisms such as fungi and
bacteria. Dew may also wet the stalks, and they
are turned frequently to evenly wet them and avoid
excessive decay. Continued soaking, attack by
organisms, and pounding of the stalks results in
the liberation of individual fibers from their
vascular bundles. Natural retting takes from one
week to a month. The fibers are thoroughly dried,
wrapped in bundles and stored in a cool, dry area.
The yield of fiber is approximately 25% of the
weight of the dried stalks.
Seeds are harvested by cutting
fields of seeded pistillate plants and removing
the seeds either by hand or machine. Cannabis
seeds usually fall easily from the floral clusters
when mature. The remainder of the plant may be
used as pulp material or low-grade cannabis. The
Indian tradition of preparing ganja is by walking
on it and rolling it between the palms to remove
excess seeds and leaves.
Seeds are allowed to dry
completely and all vegetable debris is removed
before storage. This prevents spoilage caused by
molds and other fungi. Seeds to be used for oil
production may be stored in bags, boxes, or jars,
and not exposed to excess humidity (causing them
to germinate) or excessive aridity (causing them
to dry out and crack). Seeds preserved for future
germination are thoroughly air dried in paper
envelopes or cloth sacks and stored in air-tight
containers in a cool, dark, dry place. Freezing
may also dry out seeds and cause them to crack. If
seeds are carefully stored, they remain viable for
a number of years. As a batch of seeds ages, fewer
and fewer of them will germinate, but even after 5
to 6 years a small percentage of the seeds usually
still germinate. Old batches of seeds also tend to
germinate slowly (up to 5 weeks). This means that
a batch of seeds for cultivation might be stored
for a longer time if the initial sample is large
enough to provide sufficient seeds for another
generation. If a strain is to be preserved, it is
necessary to grow and reproduce it every three
years, so that enough viable seeds are always
available.
Curing Floral Clusters
Harvesting, drying, curing, and
storage of Cannabis floral clusters to preserve
and enhance appearance, taste, and psychoactivity
is often discussed among cultivators. More floral
clusters are ruined by poor handling after harvest
than by any other single cause. When the plant is
harvested, the production of fine floral clusters
for smoking begins. Cannabis floral clusters are
harvested by two basic methods: either
individually, by cutting them from the stalks and
carefully packaging them in shallow boxes or
trays, or all simultaneously by uprooting or
cutting off the entire plant. In instances where
the floral clusters mature sequentially,
individual harvest is used because the entire
plant is not ripe at any given time. Removing
individual clusters also makes drying easier and
quicker because the stalks are divided into
shorter pieces. Floral clusters will dry much more
slowly if the plant is dried whole. This means
that all of the water in the plant must pass
through the stomata on the surface of the leaves
and calyxes instead of through cut stem ends. The
stomata close soon after harvest and drying is
slowed since little water vapor
escapes.
Boiling attached Cannabis roots
after harvesting whole plants, but before drying,
is an interesting technique. Origi nally it was
thought by cultivators that boiling the roots
would force resins to the floral clusters. In
actuality, there are very few resins within the
vascular system of the plant and most of the
resins have been secreted in the heads of
glandular trichomes. Once resins are secreted they
are no longer water-soluble and are not part of
the vascular system. As a result, neither boiling
nor any other process will move resins and
cannabinoids around the plant. However, boiling
the roots does lengthen the drying time of the
whole plant. Boiling the roots shocks the stomata
of the leaves and forces them to close
immediately; less water vapor is allowed to escape
and the floral clusters dry more slowly. If the
leaves are left intact when drying, the water
evaporates through the leaves instead of through
the flowers.
Whole plants, limbs, and floral
clusters are usually hung upside down or laid out
on screen trays to dry. Many cultivators believe
that hanging floral clusters upside-down to dry
makes the resins flow by gravity to the limb tips.
As with boiling roots, little if any transport of
cannabinoids and resins through the vascular
system occurs after the plant is harvested.
Inverted drying does cause the leaves to hang next
to the floral clusters as they dry, and the resins
are protected from rubbing off during handling.
Floral clusters also appear more attractive and
larger if they are hung to dry. When laid out flat
to dry, floral clusters usually develop a
flattened, slightly pressed profile, and the
leaves do not dry around the floral clusters and
protect them. Also, the floral clusters are
usually turned to prevent spoilage; this requires
extra handling. It is easy to bruise the clusters
during handling, and upon drying, bruised tissue
will turn dark green or brown. Resins are very
fragile and fall from the outside of the calyx if
shaken. The less handling the floral clusters
receive the better they look, taste and smoke.
Floral clusters, including large leaves and stems,
usually dry to about 25% of their original fresh
weight. When dry enough to store without the
threat of mold, the central stem of the floral
cluster will snap briskly when bent. Usually about
10% water remains in dry, stored Cannabis floral
clusters prepared for smoking. If some water
content is not maintained, the resins will lose
potency and the clusters will disintegrate into a
useless powder exposed to decomposition by the
atmosphere.
As floral clusters dry, and even
after they are sealed and packaged, they continue
to cure. Curing removes the unpleasant green taste
and allows the resins and cannabinoids to finish
ripening. Drying is merely the removal of water
from the floral clusters so they will be dry
enough to burn. Curing takes this process one step
farther to produce tasty and psychoactive
cannabis. If drying occurs too rapidly, the green
taste will be sealed into the tissues and may
remain there indefinitely. A floral cluster is not
dead after harvest any more than an apple is.
Certain metabolic activities take place for some
time, much like the ripening and eventual spoiling
of an apple after it is picked. During this
period, cannabinoid acids decarboxylate into the
psychoactive cannabinoids and terpenes isomerize
to create new polyterpenes with tastes and aromas
different from fresh floral clusters. It is
suspected that cannabinoid biosynthesis may also
continue for a short time after harvest. Taste and
aroma also improve as chlorophylls and other
pigments begin to break down. When floral clusters
are dried slowly they are kept at a humidity very
near that of the inside of the stomata.
Alternatively, sealing and opening bags or jars or
clusters is a procedure that keeps the humidity
high within the container and allows the periodic
venting of gases given off during curing. It also
exposes the clusters to fresh air needed for
proper curing.
If the container is airtight and
not vented, then rot from anaerobic bacteria and
mold is often seen. Paper boxes breathe air but
also retain moisture and are often used for curing
Cannabis. Dry floral clusters are usually trimmed
of outer leaves just prior to smoking. This is
called manicuring.
The leaves act as a wrapper to
protect the delicate floral clusters. If manicured
before drying, a significant increase in the rate
of THC breakdown occurs.
Storage
Cannabis floral clusters are best
stored in a cool, dark place. Refrigeration will
retard the breakdown of cannabinoids, but freezing
has adverse effects. Freezing forces moisture to
the surface from the inside of the floral tissues
and this may harm the resins secreted on the
surface. Floral clusters with the shade leaves
intact are well protected from abrasion and
accidental removal of resins, but manicured floral
clusters are best tightly packed so they do not
rub together. Glass jars and plastic freezer bags
are the most common containers for the storage of
floral clusters. Polyethylene plastic sandwich or
trash bags are not suited to long-term storage
since they breathe air and water vapor. This may
cause the floral clusters to dry out excessively
and lose potency. Heat-sealed boilable plastic
pouches do not breathe and are frequently used for
storage. Glass canning jars are also very
air-tight, but glass breaks. It is feared by some
connoisseurs that plastic may also impart an
unpleasant taste to the floral clusters. In either
case, additional care is usually taken to protect
the floral clus ters from light so another opaque
container is used to cover the clear glass or
plastic wrapping. Clusters are not sealed
permanently until they have finished curing.
Curing involves the presence of oxygen, and
sealing floral clusters will end the free exchange
of oxygen and end curing. However, oxygen also
causes the slow breakdown of THC to CBN, so after
the curing process is completed, the container is
completely sealed. Any oxygen present in the
container will be used up and no more can enter.
Nitrogen has been suggested as a packing medium
because it is very non-reactive and inexpensive.
Jars or bags may be flooded with nitrogen to
displace air and then sealed. Vacuum-sealing
machines are available for Mason jars and may be
modified to vacuum-sealed bags.
The proper harvesting, curing, and
storage of Cannabis closes the season and
completes? the life cycle. Cannabis is certainly a
plant of great economic potential and scientific
interest; its rich genetic diversity deserves
preservation and its possible beneficial uses
deserve more research.
He who sows the ground with care
and diligence acquires greater stock of religious
merit than he could gain by the repetition of ten
thousand prayers.
- Zoroaster, Zendavesta
bibliography -
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