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Elevated — Canopy Stress

Aphids in Cannabis Facilities

Pests · Affects canopy & compliance

The short answer

Aphids are soft-bodied, sap-sucking insects that colonize growing tips, leaf undersides, and stem tissue. They reproduce rapidly — a single aphid can produce dozens of offspring per week without mating — and populations build quickly in vegetative growth. The contamination risk extends beyond plant stress: aphid honeydew is a concentrated sugar excretion deposited directly on plant tissue that supports sooty mold colonization and contributes to the yeast and mold load at harvest. Winged forms allow dispersal between rooms; a localized infestation in veg can become a facility-wide problem within two to three weeks if undetected.

Identification and population monitoring

Aphids are 1 to 3mm, soft-bodied, and range from pale green to yellow or black depending on species. They feed in clusters on growing tips and the underside of young leaves. Visible signs include:

Honeydew: A sticky, glossy coating on leaves and stems below feeding colonies. Ants are attracted to honeydew and their presence near the canopy is often the first indicator of aphid pressure in veg.

Sooty mold: A black, powdery fungal growth on honeydew deposits. Sooty mold does not directly infect the plant but colonizes the deposited sugar and is visible on leaf and stem surfaces near feeding sites.

Distorted growth: Heavy feeding on growing tips causes curling, stunting, and distorted new growth. This symptom appears after populations have been established for at least a week.

Yellow sticky traps placed at canopy level are useful for detecting winged aphid dispersal. Regular visual inspection of growing tips, including leaf undersides, is the standard monitoring practice.

Honeydew, sooty mold, and the TYM connection

The direct plant damage from aphid feeding is the most visible problem, but the secondary contamination risk from honeydew deposits is the compliance-relevant concern for commercial cannabis operations.

Aphid honeydew is an ideal growth substrate for sooty mold fungi — predominantly Cladosporium, Alternaria, and related species. These fungi colonize honeydew deposits within days of deposition and remain on the plant surface. At harvest, flower tissue carrying sooty mold growth will have an elevated TYM count that reflects the fungal load from the mold colonization rather than from facility sanitation failures. This distinction does not matter to the testing laboratory or the state program.

Aphid exuviae (molted skins) also accumulate on flower tissue during heavy infestations. These shed skins are organic material that contributes to the organic particulate load on harvested flower, further elevating TYM.

Controlling the aphid population during flower is not sufficient if honeydew deposits are already present on the canopy; the mold colonizing those deposits continues to develop until harvest.

Entry and spread mechanisms

Aphids enter cannabis facilities through incoming plant material, personnel carrying winged forms on clothing, and air intake. Incoming cuttings or mother plants are the most common introduction vector; aphid colonies on the underside of leaves in a mother room are easy to miss during a quick inspection.

Once established, populations spread through winged dispersal. When a colony becomes crowded or the host plant is stressed, the colony produces winged adults that fly or are carried by air movement to uninfested plants. This mechanism means aphid pressure in one room can appear in adjacent rooms within days, without any physical movement of plant material.

How CLEANTheory addresses this

Removing honeydew residue from surfaces and reducing the mold baseline

PATHox™
Applied between cycles to benches, trays, and structural surfaces to remove honeydew residue and sooty mold deposits that carry over between crops. Honeydew on bench surfaces is a carryover mold reservoir that re-contaminates the next crop from the surface up rather than from the canopy down.
FERTox™
Reduces the baseline microbial load in the irrigation water, which compounds the TYM risk from aphid-related surface contamination. A clean water system reduces the baseline that honeydew and exuviae elevate at harvest.
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Key takeaways

Stop contamination before it stops your harvest.

CLEANTheory works with licensed indoor cultivators nationwide. Book a free assessment and we'll identify your highest-risk contamination vectors and prescribe a program across water, surface, and air.

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