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What growers need to know

adminBy adminDecember 2, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read
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What Growers Need to Know
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Close-up of the periodic table highlighting heavy metals like mercury, cadmium, and gold with a warm illuminated glow.
Image: oselote / Depositphotos

Cannabis — like well-known phytoaccumulators such as Indian mustard and willow — can take up certain heavy metals from soil and store them in roots, stems, and leaves. This is useful for phytoremediation but makes input control and testing necessary when the crop will be consumed by humans or pets. As products are inhaled and ingested by humans, the states have set very low levels of arsenic and cadmium. Crops that exceed these limits cannot be sold. Heavy metals are used in many industries, including agriculture, medicine, and technology. Some heavy metals, in fact are trace elements used for plant nutrition. Others, such as arsenic and chromium are important for public health. Public water supplies are routinely tested for heavy metals to evaluate potential risks for human consumption and to food products like fish.

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, fertilizers, composts, and some household products. Arsenic, for example, is found in agricultural products like insecticides and herbicides. Cadmium and lead have been measured in the atmosphere and rivers in the vicinity of metal smelters, raising health-safety concerns.

Common sources of contamination in modern grows

prodigyusa.com

Heavy metals in the environment can make their way into soilWhile many modern cultivation facilities operate indoors with controlled inputs, proximity to legacy industry or agricultural operations can introduce risk via soils, dust, or overspray. In order to avoid contamination of crops with heavy metal levels above the permitted limits, nutrient and other inputs for cannabis and hemp are frequently tested. This has led to the discontinuation of certain insecticides and fumigicides. Peroxide, for example, can cause problems when used to treat water. Plants can be less able to absorb heavy metals if certain growing conditions are met. Keeping media pH near 6-7 (soil) or 5.5-6.5 (soilless) helps plant nutrition and tends to reduce the solubility of many metals, which increases in more acidic conditions.

Because of cannabis’s increasing popularity, scientists are increasingly interested in the interactions between the plant and heavy-metal contaminants. Researchers found that hemp didn’t significantly translocate lead, arsenic or cadmium into the aboveground tissues in most cases. Only cadmium reached leaf tissue, and then only when concentrations in the growing media were unusually high.

Practical steps to keep heavy metals out of your crop

Growing cannabis indoors instead of in an outdoor setting allows for better control over the general environment and the inputs used, such as fertilizers and growing media. The introduction of heavy metals can be controlled by testing both the water entering the facility as well as the recycled water. It is important to clean irrigation lines between crop cycles with fresh water in order to avoid the accumulation of heavy-metals and other toxins. Older equipment such as pot filling machines and fertilizer tanks may also have accumulated metals that could be released due to corrosion, galvanic coupling or pipe-scale disruption. Corrosion and mixed-metal joins can increase metal release into water; periodic testing of process water and line cleaning helps.

Industry-wide, cultivators have implemented measures to reduce undesirable pests and create a safer environment for workers. Growing companies are increasingly using integrated pest management (IPM) to reduce pesticide use and promote good crop care with biostimulants or fungicides. As with any other crop, regularly monitoring pH and electrical conductivity (EC) will help reduce heavy-metal bioavailability.HortScience scholarly journalWhy testing methods matter more than ever

Methods for heavy-metal analysis must be adapted to the material tested so the results reflect what is truly available to plants and false positives are avoided. Several laboratory methods are more suitable for irrigation than drinking water and do not measure bioavailability. Plant-availability in media is better assessed with extractants (e.g., DTPA, Mehlich-3, CaCl2) than with total-digest values alone.

Research on cannabis-metal interactions remains limited compared to staple food crops, and more research needs to be conducted for a better understanding of

as well as what triggers heavy-metal release throughout production and processing. As research expands, laboratory protocols are expected to evolve, offering methods better suited to the unique components and cultivation practices of this plant.

Heavy metals in cannabis: What growers need to know

How do heavy metals get into cannabis?

Cannabis can absorb metals like arsenic, cadmium, lead, and mercury through soil, fertilizers, composts, contaminated water, oxidants in irrigation lines, or even aging equipment that leaches metal as it corrodes.heavy-metal pathwaysDo indoor grows face heavy-metal risks?


Yes, but they’re different from the ones outdoor growers face. Contaminated inputs, oxidized irrigation lines, recycled water, and legacy equipment can still introduce metals into the crop.

  1. Can adjusting pH reduce heavy-metal uptake in cannabis?

    Generally, yes. Keeping soil near pH 6-7 or soilless media near 5.5-6.5 can reduce solubility for many metals and limit plant uptake.

  2. What tests actually measure plant-available metals?

    Extractants such as DTPA, Mehlich-3, and CaCl2 provide a more accurate picture of what plants can absorb than total-digest or drinking-water testing methods.

  3. What does recent research say about hemp and metal uptake?

    A HortScience study found hemp did not significantly translocate arsenic, cadmium, or lead into aboveground tissue under typical conditions, except for cadmium at unusually high levels.

  4. As a horticulture specialist with more than thirty-five years’ tenure at

    ,

  5. Susan Parent

    specializes in plant health solutions, microbiology, and grower support. For the past fifteen years, she has helped growers improve crop quality and yield with innovative approaches to enhance plant growth and productivity.


Susan Parent Premier Tech horticulture specialist

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