The Benefits Of Clones
The Cannabis cultivation industry has increasingly utilized technologies from modern agriculture. Since 2015, Hemp Plant Nursery has implemented tissue culture micropropagation to generate mother stock plants for our Nursery.
Tissue culture micropropagation
is the production of plants in sterile containers containing nutrient media.
These plants are sub-cultured over a period of time, multiplying their numbers
indefinitely. When desired, plants exit the micropropagation cycle and are
‘hardened off’- acclimatized to living outside of the tissue culture
environment. Micropropagation is widely used in crops such as grapes, hops,
sweet potato, and also in flowers such as orchids, roses, and chrysanthemums
for both mass production and as part of pathogen eradication programs.
Cannabis plants are
host to a large number of bacteria, viruses, and fungi that live on the plant
surface (exogenous) and within the plant circulatory system (endogenous).
Harmful microbes such as HpLVd,
Botrytis, Aspergillus, Pseudomonas, Salmonella, and E. coli are potential
Cannabis contaminants. State Cannabis regulations increasingly include testing
for microbe contamination of Cannabis products wedding cake in addition
to pesticide content.
One benefit of tissue
culture micropropagation is the removal and/or vast reduction of both exogenous
and endogenous bacteria and fungi that make up the Cannabis microbiome. Plants
entering our micropropagation system are topically sterilized before
inoculation into tissue culture. Any microbes that survive treatment continue
to grow in culture as unwanted contamination. Contaminated containers are
identified and removed from the population, leaving a population of sterile
plants. Once established, tissue culture production facilities maintain low
contamination rates by continuous aseptic transfer. The ‘vigor’ associated with
micropropagated plants is partially due to this reduction of contaminants.
Tissue culture is an
excellent way to ‘rejuvenate’ old genetics. Much of the ‘genetic drift’ from
clonal cut propagation is speculated to be a pathogen load that is causing
inconsistencies in plants, not genetic variation of source material. ‘Genetic
drift’ is a term for genetic variation in a sexually reproducing population,
and cannot contribute to asexual clonal propagation. Plants from tissue culture
have been observed to grow vigorously after micropropagation, with increased
internode production.
Tissue culture micropropagation
allows for a sterile growing environment without the use of
herbicide/pesticides. As concerns over use of pesticides such as Imidacloprid,
Myclobutanil, Paclobutrazol, and other systemics increase, micropropagation is
seen as a popular opportunity to mass-produce Cannabis plants without worry of
infestation with thrips, whiteflies, aphids, and other pests.
Every year new
Cannabis cultivars enter the market. As grower’s genetic libraries grow, they
must balance the need to maintain diverse plant selection while also scaling
production. Tissue culture has emerged as a promising solution to long-term
storage needs. Once established in culture, maintenance of a strain in tissue
culture is a fraction of the labor of maintaining an equivalent mother plant.
Having a tissue culture repository of genetics is also a useful contingency in
the case of fire, disease outbreak, or other catastrophic loss to a grower.
Cannabis Clones
Tissue culture continues to evolve in its role in commercial cannabis production.
By utilizing tissue culture micropropagation, growers can be ensured elite
disease-free plants can be produced for years.
In conclusion, Tissue
Culture Micropropagation:
– An agricultural
technology used for mass production of plants
– Free of microbial
disease and pests
– ‘Rejuvenates’ old
mother stock material
– Pesticide free
– Useful for long-term
genetic storage
To find out more about
tissue culture services,Contact Us
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