CLEANTheory — Field Reference
Cannabis Cultivation Field Reference
Pathogen profiles, chemistry comparisons, and facility protocols for licensed cultivators — to help you stop guessing, pass more tests, and grow better product.
Results
The most consequential test failure in cannabis: four pathogenic species, all mycotoxin-producing, all preventable with the right upstream program.
Gray mold spreads fast in flowering rooms and can take down a room in days; early detection and containment protocols are the difference.
A common airborne mold that colonizes surfaces before plants, often the first indicator that air treatment is inadequate.
A soil and water-borne pathogen that causes wilt and root rot, often misdiagnosed until the window for intervention has closed.
Septoria, Alternaria, Cercospora, and Bipolaris are routinely misdiagnosed as nutrient issues until humidity and splash spread drive a full outbreak.
Drying rooms, cure containers, trim equipment, and packaging surfaces all carry microbial risk that shows up on the final COA.
Persistent, hard to fully eradicate once established, and not solvable by surface treatment alone; covers lifecycle, triggers, and what actually works.
A water mold that thrives in recirculating systems and spreads through irrigation infrastructure before symptoms appear at the root zone.
A soilborne pathogen associated with damping-off and crown collapse in propagation, driven by contaminated media, wet benches, and reused pots.
Biofilm is the hidden driver behind persistent contamination in recirculating systems; standard sanitation misses it entirely.
Crown and root collapse in propagation is usually a disease complex involving fungal, oomycete, and bacterial organisms, driven by tools, trays, and moisture.
A mandatory test failure in most state programs, traced to water sources, organic inputs, and environmental conditions that go unaddressed between cycles.
A silent systemic pathogen responsible for dudding and yield loss; spreads through tools and clones and is not detectable without molecular testing.
A whitefly-associated virus whose symptoms are routinely misdiagnosed as nutrition or environment issues until the population is established.
A human-pathogen failure associated with contaminated water, organic inputs, and post-harvest handling; requires absence testing, not count-based thresholds.
One of the most common microbial test failures in cannabis; covers what drives it up between harvests and what the thresholds actually mean.
Aphids colonize growing tips and excrete honeydew that supports sooty mold growth and contributes to the organic load that drives TYM count failures.
Fungus gnat larvae feed on roots and vector Pythium and Fusarium; the adult population is the visible indicator of a root zone problem that's already underway.
Hemp russet mites are microscopic, invisible without magnification, and routinely misdiagnosed as nutrient deficiency or light stress until the infestation is facility-wide.
Pests and pathogens are not separate problems in a cannabis facility; the mechanical wounds, organic deposits, and stress conditions that pests create are the conditions pathogens need to establish.
Pesticide residue failures are among the most common COA failures in cannabis — and the most preventable, because most come from products applied without checking the state-approved list.
Spider mites establish fast, reproduce faster, and create the leaf damage and stress conditions that invite secondary pathogen colonization.
Thrips cause direct damage to flowers and leaves and create the mechanical wounds that allow Botrytis to establish in canopy that would otherwise resist infection.
Whiteflies cause direct feeding damage and transmit Lettuce Chlorosis Virus — a crippling infection whose symptoms are routinely misdiagnosed as nutrient deficiency for weeks.
ACH directly affects spore load, CO₂, and humidity stability; most facilities run under-spec without knowing it.
More contamination events trace back to humidity failure than any other single variable; covers target RH by growth stage and common failure points.
Undersized or poorly maintained HVAC systems move air and everything in it, becoming contamination vectors rather than controls.
VPD connects temperature and humidity to plant stress; drift outside target ranges creates contamination windows that show up on the next COA.
Untreated irrigation water is one of the most common contamination vectors in indoor cultivation; covers source water risks and treatment options.
Closed-loop systems amplify contamination risk; a pathogen introduced at the reservoir reaches every plant on the loop.
pH determines which microbes thrive and how effective your treatment chemistry is; chasing 6.0 without treating is an incomplete response.
What labs actually test for, how samples are collected, and why results don't always reflect what's happening in the facility.
When a batch fails, remediation may be an option before destruction; covers what's legally permissible by state and the facility response that protects your license.
Total aerobic count, coliforms, and Enterobacteriaceae on a COA point directly to water quality, handling practices, or post-harvest sanitation gaps.
Aflatoxins and ochratoxins survive remediation that kills the mold that produced them; prevention is the only reliable strategy.
There is no federal standard; each state sets its own thresholds for Aspergillus, TYM, E. coli, and others.
Sachets, tablets, and packets produce a different chemistry than 3-precursor systems; purity, stability, and delivery method determine the outcome.
Bleach falls short in predictable ways: pH dependence, chlorine byproducts, ionic residue on surfaces, and no viable path into the irrigation system.
Filtration captures particulates but doesn't inactivate biologicals or treat surfaces; covers where it earns its place and where it falls short as a standalone strategy.
Copper sulfate and copper hydroxide have real limitations indoors: accumulation risk, regulatory complexity, and gaps ClO₂ fills in surfaces and water.
Alcohol is ubiquitous in cannabis facilities and widely misunderstood as a complete sanitation solution; it is a tool, not a program.
HOCl is increasingly present in cannabis sanitation programs; covers generation methods, pH sensitivity, and how it compares to ClO₂ in water and surface applications.
H₂O₂ and silver-stabilized variants are common in cannabis; covers the efficacy gap against biofilm and the conditions under which they are and aren't sufficient.
Bipolar ionization had a significant marketing moment; the independent efficacy data has not kept pace with the claims.
Ozone is an aggressive oxidizer with real efficacy and real limitations; worker exposure thresholds and byproduct concerns make it a poor fit for occupied facilities.
Ozone generators operate at concentrations incompatible with occupied facilities; shock treatment and continuous treatment are not the same program.
PAA is widely used in cannabis sanitation; covers how it compares to ClO₂ on biofilm efficacy, residue, worker safety, and regulatory standing.
PCO has been widely marketed for air purification and scrutinized equally for generating formaldehyde as a byproduct under certain operating conditions.
Quats are among the most common sanitation actives in cannabis and among the most prone to resistance buildup and residue accumulation.
ROS devices generate oxidizing species with efficacy claims that are difficult to validate independently; a registered chemistry with a known concentration profile is a more defensible position.
Sulfur vaporizers remain common for powdery mildew despite worker safety concerns and product residue risks that are difficult to manage in licensed facilities.
UV-C has line-of-sight limitations and contact time requirements that real-world airflow speeds routinely defeat; not a substitute for continuous treatment.
A clean room next to a hot room isn't clean for long; airflow, personnel movement, and shared equipment are the pathways that propagate contamination.
A room that fails testing or shows visible mold requires a different response than routine sanitation; covers the decontamination sequence and compliance documentation.
HVAC, irrigation lines, and bench surfaces are three of the most common contamination vectors and the three most commonly under-sanitized.
What happens between harvests, and in what sequence, sets the baseline contamination pressure going into the next cycle.
Trim equipment, drying room surfaces, and handling practices all affect the final COA; covers the post-harvest protocol that protects product through cure and packaging.
IPM frames contamination control as a system, not a reaction; covers the four-tier model, documentation for compliance, and where ClO₂ fits within a licensed program.
Contamination introduced at propagation travels through the entire facility lifecycle; the sanitation program that keeps genetics clean from day one.
Most state programs require written sanitation procedures as a condition of licensure; covers what a defensible SOP looks like and what inspectors look for.
Rotating sanitizers reduces resistance risk on treated surfaces; it does not address the water loop, coverage gaps, or the air pathway driving most recurring failures.
CLEANTheory programs are designed to operate in occupied facilities at concentrations calibrated to OSHA, NIOSH, and EPA worker safety thresholds.
Many facilities see measurable improvement within one grow cycle; where you start determines the timeline, and CLEANTheory sets expectations after the assessment, not before.
CLEANTheory installs the system, trains your team, reviews your COAs, and returns on a defined cadence; the program is the product, not the chemistry alone.
Program cost depends on facility size, water volume, and which vectors need addressing; in most cases less per month than the fully accounted cost of one remediation cycle.
Direct on-site service across New England, the Mid-Atlantic, and the Northeast; authorized representatives in Northern California; remote consulting available nationwide.
Contact CLEANTheory directly with specifics about what you're seeing, when, where, and what your current program looks like, and we'll tell you what to do.
FERTox treats the water loop, PATHox treats surfaces, and AIRRox manages odor and VOC pressure; which one you need depends on where contamination pressure is originating.
Most facilities sanitize on a schedule that looks adequate on paper; the gaps in frequency and coverage are what drive recurring COA failures.
Recurring remediation is not just a cost of doing business; it is a symptom of unaddressed upstream contamination pressure that the current program is not closing.
A certified CLEANTheory technician generates chlorine dioxide on-site at time of delivery; fresh, verified, and dosed to your specific facility, not chemistry that shipped weeks ago.