“…The high percentage of dolichodial in the Sardinian coastal populations, compared with the Sardinian mountain populations, and other ones (such as the Corsican samples), is economically remarkable [ 5 , 38 , 81 ]. To favour the sustainable economic use of Teucrium marum EO, simultaneously avoiding genetic erosion due to an unsustainable wild collection [ 82 , 83 ], we strongly suggest Sardinian T. marum micropropagation and its multiplication in nursery, to obtain a large number of new individuals [ [84] , [85] , [86] ], in accordance with IUCN [ 87 ], WWF/TRAFFIC, World Health Organization (WHO), the Convention on Biological Diversity [ [88] , [89] , [90] , [91] ], and the International Standard on Sustainable Wild Collection of Medicinal and Aromatic Plants [ 83 , 92 , 93 ] guidelines.…”