Seedling fungus gnats

As if!

Active Member
Agreed.
I was referring to the OP's situation........I believe he was asking if the leaf damage was caused by the adult gnats he saw flying......but I could be wrong about that.
No way is there enough larvae at this stage of growth to affect the roots..........it would take a major infestation, and they'd be crawling all over the place.
There were a ton of gnat
Your problem is not fungus gnats..........they don't pose a problem to plants.
Your problem is your soil.
What soil is it?
hi mick

its espoma and fox farm ocean forest with earths dust. I forgot perlite in these starter pots. The top layer of soil you see i just added(that was just ffof and esrths dust plus perlite) when i dried out the plants and took off the top layer.

the infestation was bad. There was another 4 gallon plant in there that i moved out.

you think transplant or start over?

whats do you see wrong with the soil?
 

MICHI-CAN

Well-Known Member
I actually defeated my Fungus Gnats from bottom watering using fabric pots. I let the top soil completely dry out, and they disappeared.

Last week I bought some of these for my Thrips problem, and was pleasantly surprised to see they work for Fungus Gnats too.

BENEFICIAL NEMATODES STEINERNEMA FELTIAE


Appearance: 0.5mm - 2mm long, non-segmented roundworms. You are very unlikely to actually see your nematodes without a microscope, though. Comes packaged in a cake format.
Storage temperature: STORE IN REFRIGERATOR 41 ̊F (5 ̊C) until exp. date
Target pests: Fungus Gnats and Western Flower Thrips
Optimum Release Conditions: Foliar spray-ensure that the crops remains wet for at least 2 hours or soil drench.

Notes: Nematodes do not prey on ladybugs, earthworms or most other beneficial insects. They are harmless to plants and humans, as is the bacterium they produce.

Also some General Advice
  • It is not recommended to spray cannabis while it is in flower. Just because a pesticide is listed as being “food safe” doesn’t mean you want to smoke it!
  • Never spray anything on your plants with the lights on. This includes water!
  • ALWAYS inspect and quarantine new plants before introducing them to your garden, even if the grower assures you that they’re bug free. What is an unnoticeable problem in their garden could become difficult to manage in your garden.
  • You can bring indoor plants outside, but bringing outdoor plants inside is risky.
  • If you introduce hydrogen peroxide to your root zone, you need to continue using it for your entire grow. Enzymes can be introduced without creating a dependency.
  • Most sprays require applications at two-week intervals because the eggs are protected.
  • Ladybugs require multiple applications as they tend to fly away.
  • You, your children and especially your pets can carry pests from outdoors. Pets should be barred from your grow room and humans should shower and change their clothes after coming in from outside. Always wash your contaminated clothes in hot water.
A bit pricey for small use. Highly suggested outdoors on your entire property. Will reduce bad things by a serious amount. The real preventive if people only knew. LOL.
 

lusidghost

Well-Known Member
I actually defeated my Fungus Gnats from bottom watering using fabric pots. I let the top soil completely dry out, and they disappeared.
If heard of this working, but you're using soil right? I'm not sure how this could be achieved using coco because it wicks so well. I flood to waste now, and while the top isn't as saturated as the bottom of the pot, it's still plenty moist.
 

MICHI-CAN

Well-Known Member
If heard of this working, but you're using soil right? I'm not sure how this could be achieved using coco because it wicks so well. I flood to waste now, and while the top isn't as saturated as the bottom of the pot, it's still plenty moist.
You can bury a drip ring about 2" below soil surface and water through it. Prevents them as well. But pain in my tent. LOL
 

Green Refuge

Well-Known Member
I agree with above, likely not a fungus gnat issue.

For those interested in a simple way to get rid of fungus gnats you can just cover your medium with steel wool Adults cannot get to your medium and hatching larvae can't get out. Takes a few weeks, perhaps four, to make sure all the larvae have hatched and you are good. It's cheap and effective. Wool might rust a bit but that's ok, it's non toxic metal and will not harm anything, it actually adds some iron to your medium.
This is legit. I've tried every trick in the book for my wife's vegetable plants and nothing worked except steel wool and mosquito bits. All that organic stuff is not meant for a serious infestation. They work if you catch the knats right before they have that new house warming orgy.
 
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