Cannabis Terpenes Guide

TERPENE GUIDE

Cannabis Terpenes: Complete Guide to Every Terpene

Myrcene, caryophyllene, limonene — terpenes define a strain’s aroma and shape your experience more than indica/sativa labels ever will.

FACT-CHECKED — Terpene data reviewed by Ann Karim. All effects information references published research and COA data from tested cannabis products.

Terpenes are the aromatic compounds produced in cannabis resin glands — the same structures that produce THC and CBD. They give each strain its distinctive smell: earthy and musky (myrcene), citrusy (limonene), peppery (caryophyllene), floral and lavender-like (linalool). But terpenes do more than smell good.

Research increasingly supports that terpenes interact with cannabinoids to modify effects — a phenomenon called the entourage effect. A high-myrcene strain will feel more sedating than a high-limonene strain at identical THC levels. Understanding terpenes gives you far more useful information about a product than whether it’s labeled indica or sativa.

This section covers every major and minor cannabis terpene: aroma profile, primary effects, receptor activity, example strains, and what the research shows.

Why Terpenes Beat Indica/Sativa Labels

The indica/sativa distinction originated as a botanical classification for plant morphology, not effects. Modern cannabis is so thoroughly hybridized that these categories carry little predictive value. A “sativa” with high myrcene will sedate; an “indica” with high limonene will uplift.

Terpene panels on certificates of analysis (COAs) tell you exactly what aromatic compounds are present and in what concentration. Two strains with the same THC level but different terpene profiles will produce noticeably different effects.

Major Terpenes: Quick Reference

TerpeneAromaPrimary EffectsCommon StrainsCB Receptor Activity
MyrceneEarthy, musky, herbalSedating, relaxing, analgesicOG Kush, Blue DreamCB1 potentiator
CaryophyllenePeppery, spicy, woodyAnti-inflammatory, stress reliefGSC, Sour DieselCB2 agonist (unique)
LimoneneCitrus, lemon, orangeUplifting, mood elevation, anti-anxietyWedding Cake, Do-Si-DosSerotonin modulation
LinaloolFloral, lavender, spicyCalming, anti-anxiety, sedatingAmnesia Haze, LA ConfidentialGABA modulation
TerpinoleneFresh, piney, floral, herbalUplifting, mildly sedating at high doseJack Herer, Ghost Train HazeIndirect dopamine
Alpha-PinenePine, fresh, sharpAlertness, memory retention, bronchodilationOG Kush, Dutch TreatAcetylcholinesterase inhibition
HumuleneEarthy, woody, hoppyAnti-inflammatory, appetite suppressantGelato, White WidowCB2 partial agonist
OcimeneSweet, herbal, woodyUplifting, antiviral, decongestantClementine, Golden GoatNot well characterized
BisabololFloral, sweet, chamomileAnti-inflammatory, skin-soothing, calmingHeadband, ACDCAnti-inflammatory pathway
NerolidolFloral, woody, citrusSedating, antifungal, anti-anxietySkywalker OG, ChemdawgMembrane interaction

The Entourage Effect

The entourage effect describes the synergistic interaction between cannabinoids and terpenes. The concept, introduced by researchers Mechoulam and Ben-Shabat, suggests that whole-plant preparations produce different effects than isolated compounds — because terpenes modulate how cannabinoids bind to and activate receptors.

Caryophyllene’s direct CB2 agonism is the strongest evidence for terpene-receptor interaction. Myrcene’s apparent enhancement of THC blood-brain barrier penetration is another well-cited example. The science is still developing, but COA-informed strain selection based on terpenes is more predictive than indica/sativa labels.

How to Find Terpene Data

COA (Certificate of Analysis): Any legally sold cannabis product should have a third-party COA that lists cannabinoid potency and terpene content. QR codes on packaging often link directly to the lab report.

Dispensary menus: Many modern dispensaries list terpene panels on their menus alongside THC/CBD percentages. Leafly and Weedmaps also aggregate this data by batch when labs report it.

Top three terpenes: Look for the top three terpenes by percentage weight — they drive the effect profile. A strain with myrcene (1.2%), caryophyllene (0.6%), and limonene (0.4%) will feel very different from one leading with limonene + terpinolene.

Most Common Cannabis Terpenes

Floral & Sweet

Pine & Fresh

Citrus, Earthy & Exotic

Ann Karim — Cannabis Research & Education

Ann Karim reviews all terpene content on ZenWeedGuide for scientific accuracy. Terpene effect claims are sourced from peer-reviewed research; receptor activity data is drawn from published pharmacology literature.