Testing for Cannabis Pollen News Reporter With California Ag Today, I’m Tim Hammerich. You’ve probably heard about sensors helping in agriculture in areas such as soil, water, and canopy. But Utah-based PollenSense is helping growers monitor pollen. This is especially important in the growing cannabis industry, says CEO Landon Bunderson. Bunderson… “If they can't prevent their female flowers from being pollinated, then their THC and CBD levels drop. And their crop is basically ruined. And since the production of hemp and cannabis, the acreage is rising every year, the risk for pollinating their production fields and even in their greenhouses goes up and up. And our technology can notify them. When there's a risk, they can turn on sprinklers to basically mist it out of the air.”