What Makes Industrial Hemp Spike to Illegal Levels of THC? – Modern Farmer

Posted: February 6, 2020 at 12:46 am

Industrial hempcannabis with a low level of THC, the compound that provides marijuanas highis legal nationwide, thanks to the 2018 Farm Bill. But due to a long period of prohibition, scientists, farmers, and consumers know very little about the plant. One of the biggest mysteries, one rife with anecdotal evidence and theories, was what causes a hemp plant to go hot, or have illegally high levels of THC. A new study from Cornell University researchers finds that the conventional wisdom is way off.

Industrial hemp has boatloads of uses; Senator Mitch McConnell used a hemp pen to sign the 2018 Farm Bill legalizing hemp, for example. But whats looking like the big cash reason for growing hemp, at least right now, is cannabidiol, or CBD. CBD is a compound in the hemp plant, and while it is very poorly understood, the CBD industry has become massive, with claimed uses ranging from anti-anxiety to cancer prevention. (The FDA has had to stop companies from claiming most of these effects, as none of them are proven.)

Currently, the law states that industrial hemp is legal if it tests with a THC level of less than 0.3 percent. Growers do their best to breed low-THC varieties of hemp, but sometimes plants still go hot, exhibiting higher THC percentages than that, and those plants cannot be sold and must be disposed of. That can be expensive, depending on how often it happens, and it can also be concerning for consumers who want to make sure they wont get accidentally stoned. So its in everyones best interest to figure out exactly what causes a hemp plant to go hot.

There had been some conventional wisdom that geography and environmentterroir, reallymight play a role in a hemp plant unexpectedly going hot. Different temperatures, amounts of water, soil makeup, the location it was grown in, all of that stuff was believed to be a possible cause of a hemp plant going hot.

New research from Cornell, though, says thats not the case. Our evidence from this paper is that fields go hot because of genetics, not because of environmental conditions, says Larry Smart, the lead author of the study, in a press release.

The study involved testing two different hemp fields, comparing genetic makeup and environmental differences. The researchers found that environment conditions had no significant effect on THC levels, but did discover that the hemp plants had different genes that seem to trigger whether theyll produce THC, CBD, or both.

This could be incredibly valuable; the researchers note that genetic testing of hemp plants can be done while the plants are still seedlings, dramatically reducing the penalty for discovering high THC levels in a mature plant. Their research indicates that THC and CBD are all based on genetics, and could provide a pathway for much easier, cheaper, and more conclusive testing. And thats good news for hemp farmers, who are finding the hemp industry to be a bit less lucrative than expected.

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What Makes Industrial Hemp Spike to Illegal Levels of THC? - Modern Farmer

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