Sativa Dominant Landrace
Sativa-dominant landrace strains represent cannabis populations that evolved in equatorial and subtropical regions over centuries, developing tall plant structures and extended flowering cycles adapted to their native environments. These strains typically display characteristic long, narrow leaflets and airy flower structures, with lineage records frequently reporting origins in regions like Colombia, Thailand, Mexico, and Southeast Asia. Breeders working in modern cannabis genetics often reference landraces as foundational germplasm for developing photoperiod-dependent cultivars and for studying natural cannabinoid and terpene expression. Unlike stabilized modern hybrids, landraces maintain genetic diversity within populations, making them valuable for understanding strain architecture and environmental adaptation. Conservation of these genetic families remains important for breeding pr
Sativa Dominant Landrace strains
No strains tagged into Sativa Dominant Landrace yet — they'll appear here as breeders submit lineage records under this family.
Sativa-dominant landrace strains represent cannabis populations that evolved in equatorial and subtropical regions over centuries, developing tall plant structures and extended flowering cycles adapted to their native environments. These strains typically display characteristic long, narrow leaflets and airy flower structures, with lineage records frequently reporting origins in regions like Colombia, Thailand, Mexico, and Southeast Asia. Breeders working in modern cannabis genetics often reference landraces as foundational germplasm for developing photoperiod-dependent cultivars and for studying natural cannabinoid and terpene expression. Unlike stabilized modern hybrids, landraces maintain genetic diversity within populations, making them valuable for understanding strain architecture and environmental adaptation. Conservation of these genetic families remains important for breeding pr
Plant breeders utilize sativa-dominant landrace genetics to introduce height management strategies, extended flowering characteristics, and environmental resilience into contemporary cultivars. These populations serve as reference material for studying cannabinoid ratios, terpene profiles, and phenotypic diversity in naturally occurring cannabis populations.
Educational reference · Cultivar metadata only · No medical claims