top of page
tokers-guide-find-the-best-weed-in-dc-lo
NEW 1 to 1 photo editing 122024 (17).png
A federally funded study found that the chemical composition of soil significantly impacts bioactive compounds in cannabis. Poor soil quality appears to result in higher THC, while higher soil quality may result in higher levels of CBG. This suggests farmers can fine-tune cannabinoid levels through soil conditions and management. The study compared cannabis grown with cover crops and conventional tillage, revealing differences in cannabinoid and terpene concentrations. More research is needed to understand the enzymes responsible for converting cannabinoids. This is the first study to show differences in extract composition of outdoor cultivated hemp grown in different soil conditions.

The Soil Cannabis Is Grown In Affects THC, CBD And Terpene Levels, Federally Funded Study Shows

Oct 8, 2025

Aaron Houston

Marijuana Moment



Bioactive compounds in cannabis are significantly impacted by the chemical
composition of the soil the plants are grown in, according to a new
federally funded study.

“The outcome of this study provides outdoor growers with information on the
effects soil health can have on cannabinoid and terpene content in hemp,”
researchers wrote in a paper appearing in a recent issue of the Journal of
Medicinally Active Plants, a peer-reviewed scientific publication. “Poor
soil quality appears to result in higher levels of THC production, whereas
higher soil quality may result in higher levels of the precursor
cannabinoid, CBG.”

This finding suggests that farmers may be able to fine-tune cannabinoid
levels with soil conditions and management, not just genetics.

The study was funded by the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA)
National Institute of Food and Agriculture, Penn State College of Medicine
and the state-licensed medical marijuana business, PA Options for Wellness.

Researchers aimed to compare two cannabis cultivars—Tangerine and CBD Stem
Cell—grown separately with cover crops (CC) and with conventional tillage
fields (CF). “This study specifically looks at the tilth aspect of
soil-health, comparing a CC field to CF” methods, the authors wrote. “Two
cultivars of hemp were grown identically in two neighboring fields, a
conventional field with tilled soil and a no-till field.”

“A comparison of hemp extracts of two different cultivars grown in both CC
soil and CF soil revealed significant differences in specific cannabinoid
and terpene concentration.”

The Tangerine cultivar grown in conventional soil produced cannabidiol
(CBD) levels about 1.5 times higher than those grown in cover crop soil.
But in the CBG Stem Cell variety, the opposite was true — CBD levels
doubled in the cover crop field. The precursor cannabinoid cannabigerol
(CBG) was 3.7 times higher in plants grown with cover crops, while THC, the
main psychoactive compound in cannabis, was up to six times higher in
plants from the tilled field.

“Soil health or soil quality are often used interchangeably; however, soil
health focuses not just on the inorganic properties of soil but also on the
biological properties of the soil and its abilities to promote life.”

The scientists concluded that “significant differences in cannabinoid
content were observed between field types and cultivars, notably
cannabidiol (CBD) levels.”

The authors note that cannabidiolic acid levels were over six times higher
in cannabis grown in conventionally tilled fields. “Tangerine CC extracts
and 2.2x higher in CF extracts of CBG Stem Cell, cannabigerol (CBG) levels
were 3.7x higher in CBG Stem Cell extracts from CC, and
Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) were 6x higher for CF Tangerine Extracts,”
they wrote.

Soil health essentially refers to the environment in which the plant is
grown. The soil’s biological life can directly shape the production of
cannabinoids and terpenoids that the plant uses for defense, communication
and competition.

Soil itself is an ecosystem of microbes, fungi, minerals and organic matter
that feeds and communicates with plant roots. Practices like cover cropping
and no-till farming are known to enhance this biological web, improving
carbon retention and nutrient cycling. The new study adds chemical
composition of the resulting plants to the list of factors potentially
shaped by soil.

“It therefore appears that hemp in [cover crop] fields may help to reduce
differences in terpene content despite innate differences due to cultivar
genetics. This outcome adds to the growing body of evidence suggesting a
relationship between the genetics of the hemp cultivar and its effect on
soil nutrient uptake…”

The authors caution that more research is needed to determine “levels of
the enzymes responsible for converting CBG into CBD, THC, and CBC,” which
could offer clues into why CBG levels accumulate in plants grown in
cover-crop fields.

“When it comes to the biosynthesis of these compounds, studies have
described shared precursors between cannabinoids and terpenoids along with
evidence of genetic variation for specific enzyme synthases of individual
cannabinoids and terpenoids,” the authors observed.

“This is the first study to show differences in extract composition of
outdoor cultivated hemp grown in different soil conditions,” the paper
notes.

This comes as more attention is paid to best practices for growing
cannabis. Earlier this year, an industrial farmer said expanding the hemp
supply chain in South Dakota will bring more small processing and
manufacturing into the state, and pull heat-trapping carbon dioxide from
the atmosphere.

More research is being done to examine various chemical compounds of
interest to scientists. Researchers have conducted the first comprehensive
sensory-guided study of the odor-active compounds in dried cannabis
flowers, uncovering dozens of previously unknown chemicals that shape the
the plant’s distinct fragrance. The findings expand scientific knowledge of
marijuana beyond the common understanding of terpenes, CBD and THC.

How marijuana is handled after harvest—specifically, how the plant is dried
before packaging—can have a significant impact on product quality, a study
showed, including with respect to preserving terpenes and trichomes,
according to a pair of recently published white papers.

The post The Soil Cannabis Is Grown In Affects THC, CBD And Terpene Levels,
Federally Funded Study Shows appeared first on Marijuana Moment.

Recent Reviews

bottom of page