LANSING, MI -- The Michigan Marijuana Regulatory Agency on Friday issued a recall for marijuana it says was potentially sold at three dispensaries.

They include two Bay City locations, Dank on Arrival, 3650 Patterson Rd., 989-778-1461, and Roots Provisioning, 3557 Wilder Rd., 989-778-1348, both licensed to sell medical and recreational marijuana, as well as Five & Dime, 20561 Dwyer Rd., Detroit, 989-778-1461, a medically licensed provisioning center.

Samples of the recalled product tested positive for high levels of Paclobutrazol, a fungicide used in marijuana cultivation.

The retail name of the marijuana is Orange Burst Buds. Packaging may contain a Metrc tracking tag listing production batch no. 1A4050100002330000000009.

The recalled marijuana packaging should also contained the following package numbers, based on the point of purchase:

Dank on Arrival, 1A4050100002330000000415

Roots Provisioning, 1A4050100002330000000416

Five & Dime, 1A405010000233000000041

“Patients or caregivers who have these affected medical marijuana products in their possession should return them to the provisioning center where they were purchased for proper disposal,” the Marijuana Regulatory Agency said. “Provisioning centers who carried the products must notify patients or caregivers that purchased these medical marijuana products of the recall.”

All three of the dispensaries are owned by Southfield-based Pharmaco, which owns eight dispensaries in Michigan and holds a license to grow 1,500 plants.

The company urges customers who believe they have purchased recalled product to return it to the point of sale for destruction and store credit, said Antonio Mansor, Pharmaco’s Director of Retail Compliance.

Mansor said the total amount of recalled marijuana is under three pounds and it was sold as loose flower.

The recall is linked to Iron Laboratories, a safety compliance lab that tests marijuana for contaminates before it may be sold at dispensaries or retail locations, said Marijuana Regulatory spokesman David Harns.

The agency suspended the Walled Lake lab in August due to an ongoing investigation into what officials said were numerous violations of state law, including falsely reporting failed test results as passing in the state’s tracking system.

On Aug. 30, the Marijuana Regulatory Agency issued a mass recall for marijuana tested at Iron Labs and subsequently issued the company a $100,000 fine. Iron Labs’ medical license has since been reinstated.

When contacted Friday evening, a representative said he wasn’t aware of the most recent recall.