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As nurseries and garden centers fill up with spring landscaping plants, home gardeners owe a lot to a technique called micropropagation, which has proven beneficial to many plants â perhaps soon to include cannabis, thanks to work by University of Connecticut researchers in the College of Agriculture, Health and Natural Resources.
Micropropagation is a technique used for growing large quantities of new plants from fewer âparentâ plants, yielding clones with the same, predictable qualities. The cannabis industry, however, has been largely left out of this beneficial technique, because this species of plant is extremely difficult to micropropagate.
Researchers from UConn â including associate professor Jessica Lubell-Brand, Ph.D. student Lauren Kurtz, and professor Mark Brand, in the Department of Plant Science and Landscape Architecture â have worked through some of the challenges of cannabis micropropagation of hemp. Their method was recently published in H
As nurseries and garden centers fill up with spring landscaping plants, home gardeners owe a lot to a technique called micropropagation, which has proven beneficial to many plants â perhaps soon to include cannabis, thanks to work by University of Connecticut researchers in the College of Agriculture, Health and Natural Resources.
Micropropagation is a technique used for growing large quantities of new plants from fewer âparentâ plants, yielding clones with the same, predictable qualities. The cannabis industry, however, has been largely left out of this beneficial technique, because this species of plant is extremely difficult to micropropagate.
Researchers from UConn â including associate professor Jessica Lubell-Brand, Ph.D. student Lauren Kurtz, and professor Mark Brand, in the Department of Plant Science and Landscape Architecture â have worked through some of the challenges of cannabis micropropagation of hemp. Their method was recently published in H