Hemp ( Cannabis sativa L.) is a dioecious annual that commences
its reproductive cycle when photoperiods are shorter than a critical
length. Photoperiod-sensitive varieties grown in low latitudes
with short-day lengths tend to produce early flowering, short plants
affecting the yield and quality of the fiber. The photoperiodic sensitivity
of the crop could be controlled by the activation or deactivation
of genes triggered by the change in light duration perceived
by photoreceptive pigments. The sexual dimorphism of Cannabis
is genetically determined by the XY chromosomal mechanism
although sexual morphology is primarily a result of endogenous
plant growth regulator levels that fluctuate in response to environmental
variables. Occurrence of occasional hermaphroditic
flowers and monoecious plants are probably the result of these fluctuations.
Understanding the mechanisms of photoperiodicity and
sexual inheritance contributes to advances in breeding and crop
management that may underpin the expansion of the commercial
cultivation of the crop in nontraditional agroecological domains
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