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[[:Category:Botany|Botany]] · [[:Category:Cannabis morphology|Morphology]] · [[:Category:Cannabis reproduction|Reproduction]] · [[:Category:Cannabis ecology|Ecology]] · [[:Category:Cannabis taxonomy|Taxonomy]]
[[:Category:Botany|Botany]] · [[:Category:Cannabis Taxonomy|Taxonomy]] · [[:Category:Plant Morphology|Morphology]] · [[:Category:Reproductive Biology|Reproduction]] · [[:Category:Life Cycle and Phenology|Life Cycle]] · [[:Category:Trichome Biology|Trichomes]] · [[:Category:Chemical Ecology|Chemical Ecology]] · [[:Category:Cannabis Ecology|Ecology]] · [[:Category:Environmental Adaptation|Adaptation]] · [[:Category:Population Biology|Population Biology]]


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Latest revision as of 18:50, 2 April 2026

Portal:Botany
Introduction

Cannabis field at peak flowering, showing characteristic morphology and growth patterns

Cannabis botany examines the plant biology of Cannabis sativa L., covering morphology, physiology, reproductive biology, chemical ecology and environmental adaptation. As one of humanity's oldest cultivated plants, cannabis exhibits remarkable diversity in growth patterns, chemical profiles and ecological adaptations across traditional growing regions.

Cannabis is a dioecious annual herb in the family Cannabaceae, characterized by palmate leaves with serrated leaflets, pistillate and staminate flowers on separate plants and dense resinous trichomes producing cannabinoids and terpenes. The species shows extraordinary morphological variation, from compact highland varieties adapted to short growing seasons to tall tropical cultivars flowering under equatorial photoperiods.

Key botanical themes include photoperiod response and flowering triggers, trichome development and resin production, phenotypic plasticity and climate adaptation, life cycle phenology across climates and the relationship between environmental conditions and chemical profiles.

Featured article

Capitate-stalked trichomes are the primary site of cannabinoid and terpene biosynthesis in cannabis. These specialized epidermal structures feature a multicellular stalk topped by a secretory head composed of disc cells that synthesize and accumulate cannabinoids, terpenes and flavonoids in a subcuticular storage cavity. Trichome density varies dramatically between landrace populations, correlating with environmental pressures such as UV radiation intensity, herbivory pressure and water stress.

Highland varieties from regions like the Hindu Kush and Western Himalayas often display exceptionally dense trichome coverage with high resin production, reflecting adaptation to intense solar radiation at high elevations. Lowland tropical varieties may show sparser but larger trichomes optimized for different environmental conditions. The chemical profile of trichome secretions also varies regionally: some populations produce predominantly THC, others CBD, while many landrace varieties maintain balanced cannabinoid ratios reflecting thousands of years of selection for traditional uses.

(Full article...)

Did you know...
  • ...that cannabis is one of the few dioecious annual crop plants, meaning every seed is the product of outcrossing between genetically distinct male and female parents?
  • ...that wind-borne cannabis pollen has been documented travelling several kilometres, making genetic isolation of landrace populations from nearby hybrid crops extremely difficult?
  • ...that some highland autoflowering varieties complete their entire lifecycle in as little as 75 days, while equatorial sativas may require 20+ weeks of flowering?
  • ...that cannabis exhibits extreme Phenotypic plasticity, with genetically identical clones producing dramatically different chemotypes under different environmental conditions?
  • ...that the resin produced by cannabis trichomes likely evolved as a defence against UV radiation, herbivores and desiccation rather than for any purpose related to human use?
  • ...that tetraploid cannabis populations have been documented growing at altitudes above 3,000 m in the Lahaul-Spiti cold desert of the Indian Himalayas?
Selected picture

Leaf morphology variation across landrace populations, showing differences in leaflet number, serration depth and overall form
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