Abstract

A Cannabis germplasm collection was evaluated for traits relevant to the use of hemp as an arable source of paper pulp. The traits were related to stem yield and quality, psychoactive potency, resistance to root-knot nematodes and plant morphology. The present study is directed at diversity for these traits considered together. For the interpretation of diversity patterns, accessions were grouped on the basis of the presumed purpose and status of domestication resulting in the recognition of four ‘plant-use groups’: fibre cultivars, fibre landraces, drug strains, and truly wild or naturalized populations. Principal component analysis showed that stem quality, phenological development, psychoactive potency and host reactions to root-knot nematodes explained most of the total variation among accessions. The plant-use groups were reasonably well separated in the principal component space. Discriminant analysis showed that the a priori defined plant-use groups could be discriminated quite well on the basis of linear combinations of all agronomic and morphological traits. The contents of bark fibre and cannabinoids had the highest grouping value. Reallocations concerned mainly old fibre cultivars which were placed in the group of fibre landraces due to a low content of bark fibre. A genetic characterization of accessions was based on electrophoretic patterns of seed proteins. Isoelectric ocusing patterns of bulk seed extracts showed variation for the presence of six out of 45 protein bands in the H range from 4.75 to 6.40. Banding patterns were however independent from any grouping based on origin or gronomic and morphological traits and did not reflect expected common ancestry of accessions.

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