I just read an article that said you can mix 3% hydrogen peroxide at a 4 to 1 ratio with water and water it into the soil and it will kill all the larve. It said you have to let the first 2 inches of surface soil dry first though as the larve will suspend thier actions in a drought condition. A little foaming will occur but the solution will break down into water and oxygen in a few hours. If I try it I will definitely re pot afterwards.
The website is www.freeplants.com/fungus-gnats.htm hope this works.
That's a good article! Prior to your H2O2 idea, it recommends "BTi" as a drench (which is the active ingredient in mosquito dunks) as also effective.
The only problem with waiting for the soil to dry out, the larvae are munching away. That is why the yellow sticky traps are good as a monitor--if no action on the traps, then no real worries.
By the way, the 'sticky traps' the others posted are fly strips. While they are yellow, and sticky and catch gnats, there are also smaller flat ones that can be placed horizontally to indicate your level of infestation. The sticky traps won't wipe out big infestations, but they will take out the occasional straggler and let you know if something bad is brewing down below.
First thing to do is just drench your plants with water and use your loop to check the runoff. If you see the tiny white flippin larvae with a black head, you got gnats. Get the dunk water activated and use it once a week. It has never harmed any of my seedlings.
My local Home Depot didn't carry Neem oil. I got a little bottle of concentrate from a hydronics store. Keep a dilute version handy with some added soap in a spray bottle. I spray the larvae in the run-off water just because they can live for a few days before dying from the dunk water.
Are mosquito dunks safe to use on seedlings? I know that mosquito dunks don't normally harm the plants in anyway, but I'm a little nervous to treat my seedlings with these dunks. I do have a gnat problem though so I need to take action somehow.
OK , I watched them die HAHAHA! Now have to hope my plants don't. My pots are set into a soil heating box so they are surrounded by warm soil up to the top of the pots,it looks like a big planting tray, they are 5x5x3.5 deep ,when I pulled them out you could see the little larve on the out side of the pot maybe 4or5 to the sq.inch and very few on the inside. I have some pots that are only soil and no plants so I checked all the soil in those pots after treating it and saw lifeless larve. Just couldn't go to sleep tonight knowing something was hurting my plants!
They are the same things we used to hang in the cow barns. Couldn't figure out what a sticky trap was till I saw the pictures.
yeah that one trap that I had that was absolutely cover has been in there for.. a month probably, but I know it is still a lot, I had forgotten to use the dunks the last couple times watering...