FlytrapCare Carnivorous Plant Forums

Sponsored by FlytrapStore.com

Discuss water requirements, "soil" (growing media) and suitable planting containers

Moderator: Matt

User avatar
By -Stanley-
Posts:  856
Joined:  Tue Nov 16, 2021 1:23 am
#432255
Is this from spider mites or fungus gnats?
D181DD92-126D-4A2C-8808-1793B2219C5B.jpeg
D181DD92-126D-4A2C-8808-1793B2219C5B.jpeg (2.78 MiB) Viewed 1321 times
User avatar
By MikeB
Location: 
Posts:  1899
Joined:  Sat Apr 25, 2020 4:13 pm
#432259
I would say fungus gnats. Spider mite webs are much more dense (like this).
-Stanley-, roarke liked this
User avatar
By -Stanley-
Posts:  856
Joined:  Tue Nov 16, 2021 1:23 am
#432260
MikeB wrote:I would say fungus gnats. Spider mite webs are much more dense (like this).
Ahhh, That's great, I'm tired of Dealing with spider mites.
User avatar
By MikeB
Location: 
Posts:  1899
Joined:  Sat Apr 25, 2020 4:13 pm
#432328
Sprinkle some mosquito dunk crumbles in low-mineral water, wait a while for them to dissolve a bit, then give your plants a nice top-water drink. The fungus gnat larvae won't know what hit them.
-Stanley- liked this
User avatar
By -Stanley-
Posts:  856
Joined:  Tue Nov 16, 2021 1:23 am
#432334
One more question, are fungus gnats harmful to flytraps?
User avatar
By MikeB
Location: 
Posts:  1899
Joined:  Sat Apr 25, 2020 4:13 pm
#432389
The larvae of fungus gnats are a hazard to your plants. They are an especially serious problem for small carnivorous plants. They damage and eat seedlings of most or all species typically grown in peat or coir as well as Pinguicula plants with leaves touching the soil surface. They may also damage and tunnel into plant stems. Fungus gnat larvae and shore fly larvae (shore flies can be a problem in greenhouses) have been shown to spread pathogenic root fungi. Root damage by the larvae may also aid in the infection of plants by pathogens. This isn't something you want growing with your plants.
Fungus Gnat Larvae
https://www.carnivorousplants.org/grow/ ... GnatLarvae
-Stanley- liked this
User avatar
By -Stanley-
Posts:  856
Joined:  Tue Nov 16, 2021 1:23 am
#432391
MikeB wrote:
The larvae of fungus gnats are a hazard to your plants. They are an especially serious problem for small carnivorous plants. They damage and eat seedlings of most or all species typically grown in peat or coir as well as Pinguicula plants with leaves touching the soil surface. They may also damage and tunnel into plant stems. Fungus gnat larvae and shore fly larvae (shore flies can be a problem in greenhouses) have been shown to spread pathogenic root fungi. Root damage by the larvae may also aid in the infection of plants by pathogens. This isn't something you want growing with your plants.
Fungus Gnat Larvae
https://www.carnivorousplants.org/grow/ ... GnatLarvae
Thanks for letting me know! I didn't know that.
Is my Leigh Wilkerson sick?

Hi Andy If you are talking about the brown marks […]

Not what you would expect...

Is it the growth inside the condiment cup. ( I cal[…]

Unknown Sarr from CalCarn

Could be a Flava, probably hybrid. Maybe has some […]

Rescue Sarracenia Rosea?

Same, my local nursery gets a lot of them. Do you […]

Hello. I recently acquired a hamata about 5 days […]

I think my plant is dying!!!

But my plant I bought from the same place doesn't […]

Soil looks quite dry to me.

Yescom Altrnatives

always found this listing weird because it h[…]

Support the community - Shop at FlytrapStore.com!