14
Van der Werf, H. M. G., W. C. A. van Geel
and M. Wijlhuizen 1995. Agronomic research on hemp (Cannabis sativa L.) in
The Netherlands, 1987-1993. Journal of the International Hemp Association
2(1): 14-17.
Introduction
A Dutch research
programme on the crop physiology and agronomy of hemp was conducted from 1987 to 1993, the
first three years being centered at the DLO Research Institute for Agrobiology and Soil
Fertility (AB-DLO) in Wageningen (Meijer et al. 1995). The last four years of the
programme were carried out at AB-DLO, at the Research Station for Arable Farming and Field
Production of Vegetables in Lelystad and at Wageningen Agricultural University (Van der
Werf 1994, Van der Werf & Van Geel 1994). This research was part of a national
research programme investigating the feasibility of hemp as a raw material for paper pulp.
Within the European Union, the prices of many
arable crops have fallen in recent years, and subsidies for food crops have been reduced
in an attempt to combat production surpluses. As a result, crop rotation on arable
farms in The Netherlands is increasingly restricted to a few crops which are relatively
profitable (potato, sugar beet) or agronomically indispensible in the rotation (cereals).
This short crop rotation has increased the incidence of diseases, in particular
soil pathogens, and has lowered yields. It has also led to greater use of biocides,
in particular of soil fumigants. This is a worrying development, as it is generally
agreed that arable farming should become more sustainable, and use less biocides.
The identification and development of a 'new'
crop, to be introduced into current rotations, might help solve this problem.
However, the new crop candidate should be profitable, produce for a large non-food market,
require little or no biocide and help reduce disease incidence in the current crop
rotations. Hemp grown for paper pulp, was proposed as such a crop in the early 1980s
(Du Bois 1982). Its yield was reported to be high and it was said to improve soil
structure. Furthermore, hemp was claimed to suppress weeds effectively, and to be
virtually free from diseases or pests. Finally, it was said that hemp stems would
fetch high prices as raw material for the pulp market. A few years later, similar
and even more fantastic claims were made by Herer (1985) in his book 'The Emperor Wears No
Clothes'. A quote from Herer's book: "Depending on which US agricultural report
is correct, an acre of full grown hemp plants can sustainably provide from four to 50 to
400 times the cellulose found in cornstalks, kenaf or sugar cane, the planet's next
highest annual cellulose plants." From these claims it would seem that hemp is
a wonder crop with nothing but advantages.
On 10 July 1843, Mr. Theophile Gautier, a
french writer, wrote his weekly contribution to the newspaper La Presse. The first
line of his contribution was most remarkable:
"For a long time, we had heard talk about
the marvellous effects brought about by hashish,
without believing much of it."
He then continued to report his personal findings in the matter. Gautier followed an empirical approach: he heard stories which seemed improbable, was sceptical, but investigated the facts. At the start of our research into the crop physiology of hemp, we were in the same position as Mr. Gautier: we had heard about the marvellous potential of fibre hemp, but we were quite sceptical about it. Like Mr. Gautier, we investigated the facts. This paper reviews the relevant literature and reports some of our major results.
The chemical composition of hemp stems
Hemp stems can
be separated into two components: the stem tissues outside the vascular cambium (bark) and
the stem tissues inside the vascular cambium (core). Bark and core differ in their
chemical composition: Bedetti & Ciaralli (1976) reported 67% cellulose, 13%
hemicellulose and 4% lignin in the bark of an Italian hemp cultivar harvested in October.
Its core contained 38% cellulose, 31% hemicellulose and 18% lignin. Bosia
(1976) presented similar results. In stems from a number of experiments conducted in
The Netherlands, the mean cellulose content of bark was 64.8%, of core it was 34.5%.
The mean hemicellulose and lignin contents were 7.7% and 4.3% in bark and 17.8% and
20.8% in core (Van der Werf et al. 1994a).
Fibre length and the contents of cellulose and
lignin are important quality parameters of raw materials for paper. The strength of
paper increases with fibre length. Cellulose content is important, because in
chemical pulping the pulp yield corresponds to the cellulose content of the raw material.
Since lignin is removed by environmentally unfriendly procedures, a low lignin
content is desirable. In the bark, fibres are longer, cellulose content is higher,
and lignin content is lower than in the core. As a result, bark is more valuable as
a raw material for paper than core and the value of hemp stems therefore depends primarily
on its bark content.
Figure 1. Location of sites mentioned in the text,
1 Valthermond, 2 Lelystad, 3 Randwijk
Pulp and paper
Paper was
invented in China in the first century BC, with hemp bast fibre as one of its major
components (Abel 1980). In 1913, world consumption of paper was 14 million ton, in
1950, it was 40 million ton and in 1989, 230 million ton (FAO 1991). However, hemp
fibres have lost their former major role in pulp and paper making. In 1989, 92% of
the virgin fibre used to manufacture paper came from wood, the remaining 8% was from
annual crops or crop residues (FAO 1991).
During recent decades the pulp and paper
industry has been criticized for its negative impact on the natural environment:
deforestation or the replacement of old-growth forests by tree plantations (Postel &
Ryan 1991), the emission of chemical waste, high energy use by pulp and paper mills, and
the production of toxic and mutagenic waste products by chlorine bleaching (McDougall et
al. 1993). Measures taken to tackle these problems include increased recycling of
paper, more sustainable management of tree plantations and forests and a shift towards
less harmful pulp and paper technologies.
A comeback for bast fibre crops as the raw
material of paper may further contribute to the solution of some of these problems.
Growing such annual crops on farmland obviously lessens the need to cut down
forests. In addition, less energy is required to produce pulp from kenaf (Keto 1990)
or hemp (S. J. Lips, DLO Agrotechnological Research Institute, personal communication
1994) compared to wood. Finally, the lignin content is lower in bast fibre crops
such as kenaf and hemp than in wood, offering better opportunities for non-chlorine
bleaching or the production of unbleached pulp (McDougall et al. 1993).
Potential yield and trial yields
Field
experiments have shown that under average Dutch weather conditions, a hemp crop sown on
April 15 and grown at a density of 64 plants per m2, will reach canopy closure on June 1 (Van der Werf 1994). Under favourable
conditions (sufficient water and nutrients, no pests, diseases or other stresses), crop
growth rates of 180 kg of above ground dry matter per ha per day have been found in hemp
crops between canopy closure and flowering (Van der Werf et al. 1995). Similar or
higher crop growth rates have been found for many other annual crops.
If a hemp crop which reached canopy closure on
June 1 were harvested on September 8, a closed canopy would have been present for 100
days. Therefore, for a late cultivar which would flower after September 8, the
increase in dry matter yield between June 1 and September 8 could be 0.18 x 100 = 18 ton
of above ground dry matter per ha. At canopy closure about 2 ton of dry matter per
ha is present, so the potential yield would be 18 + 2 = 20 t/ha. Since a
non-flowering hemp crop contains 2 to 3 t/ha of leaf dry matter, potential stem yield
would be 17 to 18 t/ha for late-flowering hemp in The Netherlands.
From 1987 to 1993, field trials were conducted
on three sites in The Netherlands (Figure 1): Valthermond (peaty sand soil), Lelystad
(light marine clay soil) and Randwijk (heavy river clay soil).
The crops were sown in April or early May and
harvested in September or October. Plant densities at emergence were between 10 and
800 per M2, but in most experiments
between 65 and 150 per m2. In
most experiments, the crops were sprayed with fungicides at 14-day intervals during June,
July and August to prevent the occurrence of fungal diseases. In these experiments,
above ground dry matter of living plants at final harvest varied between 8 and 19 t/ha.
Stem dry matter yields were 7-13 t/ha at Valthermond, 8-14 t/ha at Lelystad and
11-17 t/ha at Randwijk. At Randwijk yields were high, partly because one of the
cultivars flowered very late, increasing its yield potential. Other factors probably
also contributed to yield differences between locations: temperature (Randwijk is a 'warm'
location), soil-borne diseases (more soil pathogens at Valthermond) and soil pH and soil
water status (less favourable at Valthermond).
At all locations, observed yields generally
were well below the potential yield of 17-18 t/ha of stem dry matter. Our research
has revealed a number of causes for this discrepancy. These causes will be reviewed
below.
Plant density and self-thinning
Recommended
seeding rates for fibre hemp vary between 40 and 150 kg per ha, which correspond to plant
densities shortly after emergence of about 200 to 750 plants per m2 (Dempsey 1975). Plant densities between 80 and 400 per m2 have been found to have little effect on stem
dry matter yield (Jaranowska 1963, Jakobey 1965, Rynduch 1975, Marras & Spanu 1979,
Meijer et al. 1995). The economically optimal plant densities of hemp grown for bast
fibre are higher than the lowest plant density that gives maximum stem dry matter yield
because plant density continues to improve stem quality when it no longer increases stem
yield. With increasing plant density, bast fibre content in the stem tends to
increase (Heuser 1927, Jakobey 1965) and the fineness of the bast fibres (an important
aspect of fibre quality for spinning purposes) improves (Jakobey 1965).
In experiments conducted from 1987 to 1989,
seeding rates were high (20-140 kg per ha) as recommended in the literature.
However, at these densities more plants died before the end of the growing season than
were reported from the experiments conducted in other European countries. Even at
the lowest densities investigated, almost half the plants had died before harvest in
September (Meijer et al. 1995). Further analysis of these results and of the results
of plant density experiments conducted in 1991 and 1992 has revealed that the number of
plants surviving at harvest depends on the dry matter yield of the crop (Van der Werf et
al. 1995). At high plant densities, inter-plant competition may generate a size
hierarchy, i.e. increase variability in the size of the individuals, with large plants
suppressing smaller ones. Eventually, self-thinning may occur, if suppressed plants
die. Self-thinning is undesirable, as plants which die in the course of the growing
season will not be harvested. As a result of self-thinning, the maximum density of
living plants is smaller when the yield level is higher. In other words, one hectare
will accomodate fewer 100 year old oak trees than 6 week old radishes.
In a hemp crop yielding 10 t/ha of above ground
dry matter, the maximum density of living plants is about 460 per m2. At a dry matter yield of 15 t/ha, the maximum density of living plants is
about 120 per m2. In most
hemp growing areas of Europe, hemp yields do not exceed 8-10 t/ha of dry matter. As
a result of a later flowering dates and a better water supply, much higher yields have
been obtained in The Netherlands. At these higher yields, the optimum plant density
will be lower.
In 1991 and 1992, the cultivar Kompolti Hibrid
TC was grown at 10, 30, 90 and 270 plants per m2 at Randwijk (Van der Werf et al. 1995). The maximum stem yield (15.1 t/ha)
and the maximum bark content in the stem (35.7%) were obtained at 90 plants per m2 at harvest in September. At 270 plants
per m2, severe self-thinning caused
a lower stem yield (12.9 t/ha). Therefore, a density of about 90 plants per m2 seems optimal for late-flowering high-yielding
fibre hemp crops. When plant densities of several hundreds of plants are used in a
situation which allows dry matter yields of well above 10 t/ha, self-thinning may cause
significant losses of dry matter.
Cultivars
In our
experiments, we used the French cultivar Fedrina 74, three Hungarian cultivars (Kompolti
Hibrid TC, Kompolti Sargaszar, Kompolti), a high-fibre selection from Kompolti ('Kompolti
Hyper Elite') and the Japanese cultivar Kozuhara zairai. Fedrina 74 is monoecious,
it flowers in the beginning of August. All Hungarian cultivars are dioecious; they
flower in the second half of August. Kozuhara zairai is dioecious and flowers in the
second half of September.
Flowering date has a major effect on yield
potential. After flowering, the growth rate of the crop decreases and an increasing
proportion of the assimilates are used by the inflorescence, so that stem yield hardly
increases (Meijer et al. 1995). In 1990 and 1991, ambient daylength was compared
with a 24-hour daylength in field experiments for Fedrina 74 and Kompolti Hibrid TC at
Randwijk. The 24-hour daylength did not totally prevent flowering, but did greatly
reduce the allocation of dry matter to floral parts. Furthermore, it enhanced the
efficiency of post-flowering light use, and boosted stem dry matter yield by 2.7 t/ha in
both cultivars (Van der Werf et al. 1994b).
In 1991 and 1992 the cultivar Kompolti Hibrid
TC was compared to Kozuhara zairai at a density of 90 plants per m2 at Randwijk (Van der Werf et al. 1995). Kompolti Hibrid TC reached its
maximum stem yield (15.1 t/ha) in September, when the stem yield of Kozuhara zairai was
15.4 t/ha. The stem yield of Kozuhara zairai, however, continued to increase and
reached 16.6 t/ha one month later. From these experiments, it is clear that stem
yield of hemp can be limited by early flowering date. Ideally, a hemp crop grown for
stem production should not flower before harvest. Therefore, flowering date is a
initial criterion in cultivar choice.
Fungal diseases
In the current
hemp growing regions, disease problems in hemp crops are rare. In our experiments,
hemp crops suffered severe damage from fungal diseases in rainy years, unless fungicides
were frequently applied. Most damage was caused by the fungus Botrytis cinerea.
Sclerolinia sclerotiorum was also found, but much less frequent. Both
fungi cause stem lesions. The cultivar Kompolti Hibrid TC seemed somewhat more
susceptible to B. cinerea than the other cultivars investigated.
In 1992 and 1993, the effect of nitrogen
fertilization (0, 40, 80, 120, 160 and 200 kg per ha of nitrogen) was investigated for the
cultivars Kompolti Hibrid TC and Kompolti at Lelystad (Van der Werf & Van Geel 1994).
Plant density at emergence was 149 per m2 in 1992 and 114 per m2 in
1993. In these experiments, no fungicides were applied. In 1992, diseased
plants were rare, but in 1993 many plants carried stem lesions caused caused by B.
cinerea and some carried S. sclerotiorum lesions. The level of nitrogen
fertilization did not seem to affect the level of disease infestation. In 1992,
plant density was 96 per m2 at
harvest in September and above ground dry matter yield of living plants was 12.7 t/ha.
Another 1.1 t/ha of dead plant material was also present. In 1993 plant
density was 96 per m2 at harvest in
September and yield of living plants was 8.3 t/ha, and 3.9 t/ha of dead material was
present. These data indicate the extent to which fungal diseases can reduce hemp
yield.
In 1991, 1992 and 1993, the effect of the
fungicide application was investigated for the cultivar Kompolti Hibrid TC at Valthermond
(Van der Werf & Van Geel 1994). Plant density at emergence was about 100 per m2. Treatments were: control (no spraying),
one application of vinclozolin (0.5 kg per ha at 50% ground cover by the crop), two
applications of vinclozolin (0.5 kg per ha at 50% ground cover and again 10 days later).
In order to avoid border effects, plots were large (225 m2). Spraying of fungicides did not affect hemp yields for 1991 and 1992.
The 1993 growing season was rainy and large number of diseased plants were found in
all treatments. In 1993, above ground dry matter yield was 11.2 t/ha for the
control, 12.3 t/ha where vinclozolin had been applied once and 11.7 when the fungicide had
been used twice. The amount of dry matter of dead plants was 0.8 t/ha for the
control and 0.4 t/ha for both other treatments.
In rainy years, the occurrence of Botrytis
cinerea can cause large reductions in hemp yield in The Netherlands. Preventive
use of fungicides is not a solution to this problem as it has a modest effect on yield
only in wet years. Sources of genetic resistance to B. cinerea, e.g. some
drug Cannabis cultivars of equatorial origin, (D. P. Watson, personal communication
1995) do exist, so it should be possible to breed fibre cultivars less susceptible to B.
cinerea.
Hemp in a crop rotation
Any 'new' crop
that Dutch farmers would appreciate should help reduce disease and weed problems in the
current crop rotations. Kok et al. (1994) investigated the effect of fibre hemp on
three major soil pathogens: the fungus Verticillium dahliae and the root-knot
nematodes Meloidogyne chitwoodi and Meloidogyne hapla. All three pathogens
were suppressed by hemp, and the authors concluded that the introduction of hemp in a crop
rotation might improve soil health.
Except in the cases where plant densities were
very low (10 or 30 plants per m2),
our experiments demonstrated that hemp crops effectively suppressed weeds and that no
herbicides were needed. This confirms literature reporting such effects (Heuser
1927, Tarasov 1975, Lotz et al. 1991).
Conclusions
Agronomically,
hemp corresponds rather well to the profile of an attractive 'new' crop for arable farmers
in The Netherlands. Hemp stems potentially have a large non-food market and the crop
can give good dry matter yields, though not higher than those of other annual crops.
In order to obtain high yields, plant density should be set in accordance with the
expected dry matter yield and a sufficiently late-flowering cultivar should be used.
The fungus Botrylis cinerea can cause important damage in rainy years,
although this problem may be solved by breeding resistant cultivars. Hemp requires
little or no biocide and suppresses weeds and some major soil-borne diseases.
To what extent hemp will fulfill its promising
agronomic characteristics will largely depend on economic factors: the level of production
costs and subsidies and the demand for and prices of hemp products.
Acknowledgements
The authors
thank D. W. Pate and A. J. Haverkort for helpful comments on the manuscript.
References