Alternative Rooting Methods for Medicinal Cannabis Cultivation in Denmark - Preliminary Results

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Alternative Rooting Methods for Medicinal Cannabis Cultivation in Denmark - Preliminary Results. / Favero, Bruno Trevenzoli; Salomonsen, Jacob Kromann; Lütken, Henrik.

In: Plants, Vol. 12, No. 11, 2216, 2023.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Favero, BT, Salomonsen, JK & Lütken, H 2023, 'Alternative Rooting Methods for Medicinal Cannabis Cultivation in Denmark - Preliminary Results', Plants, vol. 12, no. 11, 2216. https://doi.org/10.3390/plants12112216

APA

Favero, B. T., Salomonsen, J. K., & Lütken, H. (2023). Alternative Rooting Methods for Medicinal Cannabis Cultivation in Denmark - Preliminary Results. Plants, 12(11), [2216]. https://doi.org/10.3390/plants12112216

Vancouver

Favero BT, Salomonsen JK, Lütken H. Alternative Rooting Methods for Medicinal Cannabis Cultivation in Denmark - Preliminary Results. Plants. 2023;12(11). 2216. https://doi.org/10.3390/plants12112216

Author

Favero, Bruno Trevenzoli ; Salomonsen, Jacob Kromann ; Lütken, Henrik. / Alternative Rooting Methods for Medicinal Cannabis Cultivation in Denmark - Preliminary Results. In: Plants. 2023 ; Vol. 12, No. 11.

Bibtex

@article{78ff768e6b474cb49f9f23ea8d888aac,
title = "Alternative Rooting Methods for Medicinal Cannabis Cultivation in Denmark - Preliminary Results",
abstract = "Cannabis sativa L. is typically propagated through micropropagation or vegetative cuttings, but the use of root-inducing hormones, such as indole-3-butyric acid (IBA), is not allowed for growing medicinal cannabis in Denmark. This study examined alternative rooting treatments, including Rhizobium rhizogenes inoculation, water-only as well as IBA treatments, in eight cannabis cultivars. PCR on root tissue suggested that 19% of R. rhizogenes-inoculated cuttings were transformed. These were derived from “Herijuana”, “Wild Thailand”, “Motherlode Kush”, and “Bruce Banner”, indicating a variation in cultivar susceptibility toward R. rhizogenes. A 100% rooting success was achieved regardless of cultivar and treatment, suggesting that alternative rooting agents are not required for efficient vegetative propagation. However, rooted cuttings differed in shoot morphology with improved shoot growth in cuttings treated with R. rhizogenes (195 ± 7 mm) or water (185 ± 7 mm) while inhibited shoot growth under IBA treatment (123 ± 6 mm). This could have advantageous economic implications should cuttings not treated with hormone reach maturity faster than those exposed to the hormone, thereby contributing to completing a full growing cycle more effectively. IBA exposure increased root length, root dry weight, and root/shoot dry weight ratio compared to cuttings treated with R. rhizogenes or water but simultaneously inhibited shoot growth compared to these.",
keywords = "C. sativa, chimeric, Rhizobium rhizogenes, root, rooting phenotype, WinRhizo",
author = "Favero, {Bruno Trevenzoli} and Salomonsen, {Jacob Kromann} and Henrik L{\"u}tken",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2023 by the authors.",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.3390/plants12112216",
language = "English",
volume = "12",
journal = "Plants",
issn = "2223-7747",
publisher = "MDPI AG",
number = "11",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Alternative Rooting Methods for Medicinal Cannabis Cultivation in Denmark - Preliminary Results

AU - Favero, Bruno Trevenzoli

AU - Salomonsen, Jacob Kromann

AU - Lütken, Henrik

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2023 by the authors.

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - Cannabis sativa L. is typically propagated through micropropagation or vegetative cuttings, but the use of root-inducing hormones, such as indole-3-butyric acid (IBA), is not allowed for growing medicinal cannabis in Denmark. This study examined alternative rooting treatments, including Rhizobium rhizogenes inoculation, water-only as well as IBA treatments, in eight cannabis cultivars. PCR on root tissue suggested that 19% of R. rhizogenes-inoculated cuttings were transformed. These were derived from “Herijuana”, “Wild Thailand”, “Motherlode Kush”, and “Bruce Banner”, indicating a variation in cultivar susceptibility toward R. rhizogenes. A 100% rooting success was achieved regardless of cultivar and treatment, suggesting that alternative rooting agents are not required for efficient vegetative propagation. However, rooted cuttings differed in shoot morphology with improved shoot growth in cuttings treated with R. rhizogenes (195 ± 7 mm) or water (185 ± 7 mm) while inhibited shoot growth under IBA treatment (123 ± 6 mm). This could have advantageous economic implications should cuttings not treated with hormone reach maturity faster than those exposed to the hormone, thereby contributing to completing a full growing cycle more effectively. IBA exposure increased root length, root dry weight, and root/shoot dry weight ratio compared to cuttings treated with R. rhizogenes or water but simultaneously inhibited shoot growth compared to these.

AB - Cannabis sativa L. is typically propagated through micropropagation or vegetative cuttings, but the use of root-inducing hormones, such as indole-3-butyric acid (IBA), is not allowed for growing medicinal cannabis in Denmark. This study examined alternative rooting treatments, including Rhizobium rhizogenes inoculation, water-only as well as IBA treatments, in eight cannabis cultivars. PCR on root tissue suggested that 19% of R. rhizogenes-inoculated cuttings were transformed. These were derived from “Herijuana”, “Wild Thailand”, “Motherlode Kush”, and “Bruce Banner”, indicating a variation in cultivar susceptibility toward R. rhizogenes. A 100% rooting success was achieved regardless of cultivar and treatment, suggesting that alternative rooting agents are not required for efficient vegetative propagation. However, rooted cuttings differed in shoot morphology with improved shoot growth in cuttings treated with R. rhizogenes (195 ± 7 mm) or water (185 ± 7 mm) while inhibited shoot growth under IBA treatment (123 ± 6 mm). This could have advantageous economic implications should cuttings not treated with hormone reach maturity faster than those exposed to the hormone, thereby contributing to completing a full growing cycle more effectively. IBA exposure increased root length, root dry weight, and root/shoot dry weight ratio compared to cuttings treated with R. rhizogenes or water but simultaneously inhibited shoot growth compared to these.

KW - C. sativa

KW - chimeric

KW - Rhizobium rhizogenes

KW - root

KW - rooting phenotype

KW - WinRhizo

U2 - 10.3390/plants12112216

DO - 10.3390/plants12112216

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 37299195

AN - SCOPUS:85161844645

VL - 12

JO - Plants

JF - Plants

SN - 2223-7747

IS - 11

M1 - 2216

ER -

ID: 358500759