An assessment of the water use of hemp: a scoping review and bibliometric analysis
S. Gokool, S. Mantel, A. Clulow, R. Kunz, A. Palmer

TL;DR
This paper reviews and analyzes scientific literature to understand how much water hemp uses and what factors influence it.
Contribution
The study provides a comprehensive bibliometric analysis and scoping review of hemp's water use, identifying key factors and knowledge gaps.
Findings
Hemp's water use ranges from 220–700 mm during the growing season.
Daily water use is typically between 4.00 mm and 5.00 mm per day.
Hemp's deep roots and stomatal regulation help it tolerate drought conditions.
Abstract
Recently, there has been a renewed and rapidly growing interest globally in the cultivation of the non-psychoactive variety of Cannabis more commonly referred to as hemp. However, there remains a scarcity of available scientific information on the water use of hemp to optimally guide its large-scale production. To address this knowledge gap, eligible peer-reviewed publications acquired from the Scopus, Web of Science and Google Scholar abstract and citation databases, were analysed using Biblioshiny and VOSviewer to gain further insights on the water use of this crop. A key finding emanating from this scoping review and bibliometric analysis was that the water use of hemp ranged from approximately 220–700 mm throughout the growing season, with daily water use generally ranging between ~ 4.00 mm d− 1 to ~ 5.00 mm d− 1. Variations in water use were primarily due to factors such as…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCannabis and Cannabinoid Research · Berberine and alkaloids research · Psychedelics and Drug Studies
