Hello friends,
Theres a buzz about a sally clone named "Luna" , this clone because of his rarity is quite expensive.. Is this a real different strain or just a variation?
There are other strains that are not as well documented, such as the Luna strain (possibly Bunnell) isolated from a Hawaiian patch of Salvia divinorum clones, featuring unusually serrated and rounded rather than ovate leaves.
While searching about this strain , I came across this info:
This is an unusual strain of Salvia divinorum. I have named it 'Luna.' I discovered it in 1994. It was growing in a patch of otherwise-normal plants of the 'Bunnell' strain at the Botanical Dimensions botanical garden in Hawaii. It is either a sport of the 'Bunnell' strain that sprung up from the root-crown of one of the surrounding plants, or it may have originated from a seed that fell from one of the surrounding plants. Considering that it is extremely rare for Salvia divinorum plants to produce viable seeds, it is most likely that this is actually a sport, quite likely a polyploid. This clone is distinct from all other strains that I know of. The leaf margin is unusually deeply serrated and the leaf is remarkably round, rather than the typical ovate shape.
There are two commonly cultivated strains which are known to be distinct. One is the strain that was collected in 1962 by ecologist and psychologist Sterling Bunnell (the Bunnell strain), colloquially mis-attributed as the Wasson-Hofmann strain. The other was collected from Huautla de Jiménez in 1991 by anthropologist Bret Blosser (the Blosser or Palatable strain)
Ps: Did you know that.. Salvia divinorum was the subject of the first use of YouTube within drug-behavioral research when scientists at San Diego State University rated randomly selected videos of salvia users to study observed impairment?