If it's not earwigs, please ignore this, and sorry to harp on!
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I've certainly seen some little earwigs*, and some monsters too - reason I said earwigs was the pincers (assumed the pincers are at the 'tail' end?).Â
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moosery, I don't think they're carnivorous - likely omnivorous? Literally watched the little beggers eating my basil and found them in the act on my passion fruit (passionately in the act, too).Â
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You're actually probably right on the baby earwig (assuming it's an earwig!) as the black field earwig grows to 3/5 of an inch (15mm for me...) and can be a lot smaller -
image here or up to 1" if they're the common brown type.
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I did a google and found a number of people saying the earwigs had been in their peppers, so it seems to be a thing that happens... if people are identifying them correctly, I guess?Â
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Try putting out a cat food tin (one of the little single-serve) like the following, and you'll hopefully catch some of them for a good photo, and try checking under any wood you've got lying around. They hide there during the day.
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Empty single serve cat food tin (doesn't need to be washed, just most of the food gone)
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Make a mix of:
 - soy sauce 1/4 cup
 - oil 1/4 cup
 - a good portion of brown sugar, maybe a tablespoon (sorry, I eyeball the whole mixture - guessing here!)
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Dig the can into the ground about 6" from the base of a plant, so it sits ground level flush with the top of the can
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Fill 1/2 full with the mixture
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Leave out overnight and see what you catch - it's fine for a few days unless it rains. You'll get roaches, slugs, caterpillars and misc other things... but not normally ladybugs or bees, so they're not so bad for the good guys.
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Try brushing some of the 'creatures' off at dusk, which should leave them on the ground - hopefully those ones will fall into your trap!
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*('wiggies', my sister calls them, as she was too young to say it when she learnt about them)