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ZOM-IND-WEB-0620250030

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Revision as of 21:46, 3 April 2026 by Eloise Zomia (talk | contribs)
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Upper Suruk Feral Selection 2025
ZOM-IND-WEB-0620250030
Mixed feral and domesticate cannabis stand at Suruk village, Upper Jaldhaka Valley
Mixed feral and domesticate cannabis stand at Suruk village, Upper Jaldhaka Valley
At a Glance
Classification Feral
Accession Type Selection
Sex Dioecious
Plant Height 1.5–2.0 m
Photoperiod Short-day
Aroma Citrus, lemon
Terpenes Unknown
Botanical Characteristics
Growth Pattern Columnar
Leaf Shape Narrow
Leaf Color Light greens
Hierarchy
Gene Pool South Asia
Regional Complex Hindu Kush-Himalayan
Growing Region Eastern Himalayas
Growing Area Upper Jaldhaka Valley
Location
Country India
Province/State West Bengal
District Kalimpong
Subdivision Kalimpong
Block Gorubathan CD
Locality Suruk
Elevation 875 m
Traditional Names
Local Name জংলি ভাঙ
Pronunciation Jongli bhāṅg
Translation Jungle Bhang
Collection
Method Seeds
Sourcing Type Point of Origin
Autochthonous Yes
Date 18/06/2025
Harvest Date 2025
Collector Éloïse,Isabella
Expedition WEB01
Conservation
Priority Medium
Cultivation
Status Active
System Type Feral
Scale Some feral populations
Preservation
Seed Storage Zomia Genetic Library


The Upper Suruk Feral Selection 2025 is a feral landrace cannabis accession collected by Isabella and Éloïse of the Zomia Collective in West Bengal, India.

Geography

Suruk is located in Kalimpong District, West Bengal, India, within the Upper Jaldhaka Valley landrace cannabis growing area of the Eastern Himalayas growing region.

Administratively, the area belongs to Gorubathan CD block in the Kalimpong subdivision which itself belongs to the Kalimpong district of West Bengal state. The village sits at roughly 850-900 m elevation along a narrow ridge facing the upper Jaldhaka valley, with clear views across to Bhutan.

Collection Details

This accession was documented by Isabella & Éloïse in June 2025. Seeds were hand selected from feral individuals within a mixed self-seeding feral and domesticate landrace cannabis stand found growing along the roadside near Suruk village. The feral plants from which seeds were collected were growing at the base of the largest domesticate landrace plant in the stand.[1]

The feral component of the population is self-seeding, growing without human cultivation or management.

Population Characteristics

The stand near Suruk covered approximately 20-30 meters between two household compounds and included both early-seeding feral plants and taller domesticate-type individuals still in early vegetative stage. No culling occurs on the feral component as it is without human management.[1]

The resident population is predominantly Tamang and Nepali-speaking. A local woman described the nisha (effects) of the village cannabis as very potent and confirmed long-standing use in the village. Residents noted a decline in open planting but not in familiarity with or use of the plant.[1]

Botanical Characteristics

Plants range in height from 1.5 to 2 meters.

In terms of morphology, the feral plants exhibited a columnar growth pattern with narrow leaflets. The leaf colour is light green.

The feral plants were distinguishable from the domesticate individuals in the same stand, which were taller with more elongated leaflets and wider internodal spacing.[1]

Aroma

The aroma is recorded as citrus and lemon. Both feral and domesticate plants in the stand shared a citrus-forward terpene profile, with the strongest individuals giving sharp, clean lemon notes on stem rub.[1]

Effects

Effects are unknown for this feral accession. Residents confirmed the village cannabis is potent but did not distinguish between feral and domesticate plants in their descriptions.[1]

Conservation Status

The accession is recorded at medium conservation priority. The stand at Suruk is a mixed feral and domesticate population, with close proximity between managed and unmanaged plants.

See Also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 Dillon, Éloïse. "Field Report #3: Western Dooars and the Kalimpong Range." Zomia Collective, 30 June 2025. [1]