Abstract:
Hemp is part of the textile plants group with high-value for human and industrial use. Hemp has over 25,000 uses,
ranging from food, paints and fuels to clothing and building materials.
Hemp is currently considered to be a plant of increasing importance for Europe, being used for fiber and oil extraction
and as medicinal plant. Hemp fibers are the most resistant plant fibers and as such, in the past, they were the most
prized raw material of the textile industry worldwide.In this paper we present the results regarding the evolution of
monoecious hemp crop on the production of stems and fiber, under the pedoclimatic conditions of the Center of
Moldova, between 2012 – 2015. The biological material used was represented by three varieties created at A.R.D.S.
Secuieni, respectively, Denise, Diana and Dacia and were sown at a distance of 12.5 cm, 25 cm respectively 50 cm
between rows. The obtained results revealed that the studied factors influenced to a great extent the production of stems,
which varied widely, ranging from 8113 kg / ha to the Denise variety at a distance of 12.5 cm in 2015 (agricultural year
characterized as very dry from pluviometric point of view), and the highest yields were obtained at the Denise variety of
15683 kg / ha, at a distance of 25 cm in 2013 (agricultural year characterized as normal from rainfall point of view). On
average, for the four years studied, the highest obtained production of fiber was achieved by Dacia variety, at 12.5 cm,
of 3388 kg / ha, and the lowest yield of 2546 kg / ha was achieved by Denise variety at a distance of 50 cm between
rows