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A young but booming industry in California is carefully watching the wildfire crisis in the state. They're worried the growing flames will have a negative effect on one of the state's biggest crops: marijuana. Harvest time in Sonoma county. We've already heard about the grapes, and concerns about how smoke taint from fires will eliminate some vintages. But here's something new. It is great concern to Erich Pearson, who is part biologist, part grower, and a full time CEO at Sparc in Glen Ellen. Right now his crop is coming in. Not with strains named doctor order, wedding crasher, or San Fernando Valley. Towering, flowering cannabis. Acres of it. And in Sonoma county, growers have concerns about smoke taint as well. After the fires, Erich had some 20-thousand plants to clear of ash. That process continued today. It's necessary considering that cannabis is easily a 100-million dollar a year taxable product in Sonoma county... And growing both figuratively and literally. The ash, this year, will not be a game breaker for Erich, especially considering how several other legal growers lost their entire crops to the glass fire. But even as those flames fade... It is clear-- their consequences continue. Cal fire officials says "the forward spread has been stopped"... When it comes to the state's fast-moving glass fire. That's due in part to containment lines. The glass fire has burned more than 100 square miles. At last check, it was more than 66 percent contained.