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Spinosad : Oregon issues first 'health alert' for tainted marijuana

R

Robrites

Oregon late Friday issued its first "health alert" for cannabis tainted with high levels of pesticide -- in this case, two strains sold by a McMinnville dispensary.
About 130 people bought the dried flowers between Oct. 15 and Oct. 17. Lab testing found the products were contaminated with spinosad, a common insecticide used in the marijuana industry.
The notice represents a major change in how Oregon deals with pesticides and marijuana.
Producers have long used pesticides to combat mold and mites, common problems that plague the plant, but it wasn't until this year that the state began to craft a tougher policy on how to protect consumers.
An investigation by The Oregonian/OregonLive last year found lax state rules, inconsistent lab practices and inaccurate test results put pesticide-laced cannabis on dispensary shelves.
The Oregon Health Authority now requires that labs testing marijuana be state-authorized. The agency also established residual amounts of pesticide allowed on marijuana products.
The so-called "action level" for spinosad is 0.2 parts per million. Green Leaf Lab of Portland detected 42 parts per million on samples of a strain called Dr. Jack and 22 parts per million on another strain called Marion Berry, both sold by New Leaf, a medical marijuana dispensary on Northeast Riverside Drive in McMinnville.
Under new rules, marijuana testing labs must alert the health authority when products fail to meet state pesticide standards.
The state declined to identify the producer, citing the confidentiality requirements of the state's medical marijuana law. The dried flowers were produced by a medical marijuana grower.
The market is shifting to a system overseen by the Oregon Liquor Control Commission.
Officials with commission couldn't say late Friday whether the producers of contaminated marijuana would be publicly identified under their rules for recreational marijuana.
"We will be double checking our rules to ensure we can properly protect the public," said Rob Patridge, chairman of the liquor control commission.


http://www.oregonlive.com/marijuana/index.ssf/2016/10/oregon_issues_first_health_ale.html
 
R

Robrites

What Is Spinosad?

An organic biological pesticide, spinosad is based on the bacterium Saccharopolyspora spinosa, which was discovered in 1982 in an old Caribbean rum still. It was soon found that these bacteria produce a substance that works as a neurotoxin in many (but not all) insects. Susceptible insect species that are exposed to spinosad become excited to the point of exhaustion, stop eating immediately, and die within two days.
 

MrBungle

Well-known member
Someone must've read the part of the label where it says "safe to use right up until harvest" and actually believed it...
 

Rondon

Member
Spinosad is the thrip killer imho. And its not the toxic poison to mammals.as some would have you believe. Cmon. Oregon is silly.
 

Jellyfish

Invertebrata Inebriata
Veteran
Spinosad is the thrip killer imho. And its not the toxic poison to mammals.as some would have you believe. Cmon. Oregon is silly.

They put this story out there so they can REGULATE our little plant EVEN MORE.

I've been buying smoking pot for 45 years, and I never bought OR smoked ANY weed that was tainted. Bring in the government, and it happens within a couple years. See how these fuckers are?
 

aridbud

automeister
ICMag Donor
Veteran
Pesticides are never completely safe, whether they’re organic or not.Sure, organics as a group are less toxic than synthetics as a group, but the best choice is to not use insecticides at all. If you do use a product, remember that the word “organic” affords you and the environment no protection at all.

Just another reason to refrain from dispensaries, yes?
 

Limeygreen

Well-known member
Veteran
there is a chemically synthesized version and an organic formulation of the product, the organic formulation costs more and the bugs develop a resistance sooner. This product can also kill off a good population of predatory mites when sprayed but not too many when dripped. I imagine spray much of anything on the flowering crop will not be good as the calyx's will continue to stack and pesticide is trapped below. It would become worse when no uv is present in indoor grows to help break down the active ingredients like sunlight does. That doesn't mean it is safe to spray outside on flowering crops or in greenhouse, just that there is more chance to break down the product.
 

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