There is a fungus among us, a fungus gnat that is.

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Posted by Aimee | Posted in Insects | Posted on 21-03-2011

Pesky vermin that frequent indoor plants, fungus gnats as adults are harmless except for their reproductive abilities. The gnats however feed on decaying plant material, and delicate plant roots, which can stunt the growth of your indoor lovelies.

I picked up a batch of these wretched little fellows in a healthy looking spider plant and have battled them for over a year. The solution was to finally get serious about taking care of them and oodles of research.

A fungus gnat is a soft-bodied very tiny black fly and indoors their entire life cycle is about one month. Each adult female is capable of distributing two hundred eggs. Those eggs hatch into maggots that infect the top couple inches of potting soil, where they feed on decaying plant matter and plant roots. They then pupate and emerge as adults to perpetuate the cycle.

The last thing you want to do is go wild with insecticides in your home. Especially if you have kids or pets. Not to worry though, there are a plethora of cheap, organic, pet/child safe alternatives. The control methods are different for the fly and the larva. I recommend using a combination of several or even all of these options.

The key seems to be persistence, you want to continue treatment for a month after the last signs of the larva and adults have been seen to catch any stragglers. One surviving female has the potential to completely recreate the population! So stick to your guns folks.

To control the flies:

Use yellow sticky traps (if the females are stuck to the paper they cannot lay eggs in your plants.) The flies are drawn to the yellow.  (You can also make these at home.)

Set out small bowls of apple cider vinegar and change regularly. The flies are drawn to the smell and then drown in the liquid.

Hand squishing, they are not fast fliers and each one you take out is one less that can be making babies.

To control larva (the root of the problem, no pun intended.):

Repot all indoor plants and cover the top couple inches with decorative sand to make their survival more difficult.

Let plants dry out between watering times.

Place a potato wedge a quarter inch into the soil and then throw away, entirely out of the house. Repeat this for several weeks, continuing even after signs of the flies are gone.

Drench houseplants in a BT solution. This is an organic pest control that is entirely harmless to people and pets, it targets all caterpillars though so do not use on plants that you want to promote butterfly larva on. This also dissipates quickly and is even safe for use on food.

Inoculate your soil with parasitic nematodes; these are little critters that will feast on the larva. Do not use this in conjunction with BT. Steinernema feltiae is one of the most effective against fungus gnats.

Know thy ENEMY

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Posted by Aimee | Posted in Insects | Posted on 11-05-2009

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This evening I was out in my garden, after a long day at work, forcing myself to get the herbs transplanted that I had wanted to get moved this last weekend and had not. When I saw what at first I thought must be a tiny tomato starting out of the corner of my eye with a bright green quarter inch globe mostly hidden through the thick foliage of my brandywine tomato. I couldn’t help myself I reached out as I have a habit of doing and touched it.

This momentous error on my part was followed by an extremely embarrassing high pitched squeak of terror when I realized that it was no tomato at all but a living critter. After I had a second to recover from the realization that I was touching bare handed a massive, scary looking caterpillar with a fierce looking orange horn. As I watched it undulated itself slowly to another branch, it kept going and going it was a good 3-4 inches long. I had never seen a caterpillar this big and he looked ferocious, that’s for sure! At first I assumed my uninvited guest was the dread tomato hornworm caterpillar I had read about, but he is actually the tobacco hornworm caterpillar Manduca sexta.
The two are very similar in appearance. The easiest way to tell them apart is by the horn color. On the tomato hornworm (Manduca quinquemaculata) the horn will be a dark black/blue and on the tobacco caterpillar it is a bright orange/red. Also the tomato caterpillar has white V shaped markings down its sides and the tobacco worm has white slashes.

So now that we have learned the identity of our culprit (of which I found three though I have pictures of only two) a little about their eating habits and life cycle ensues. They will consume any plant in the nightshade family. Some of the plants in that family are weeds, like the nightshade, however most of them are foodstuff crops for us humans like potatoes, tomatoes, eggplant, and peppers. They will feast on the inner, shaded foliage during the heat of the day working their way out ward when the temperature is cooler. Detection is possible before we find our plants over run by voracious vermin though. From late April and all the way through late July (as best as I can tell for the Houston Area) we can check the undersides on the leaves of these plants for small pearl shaped and tinted eggs, the eggs can also be a pale green. Rub them off with a q-tip dipped in rubbing alcohol if you find them. If you do find them as worms hand picking seems to be our best option. Especially since they are so large, just make sure you check from all angles. After they feast on our plants for 3-4 weeks and reach 3-4 inches they will leave the host plant and bury themselves into the ground and cocoon. The cocoon is brownish red with a “pitcher handle” or weird looking stick protruding from it. These can be cut in half with scissors if found, I am not sure if tossing them into a bucket of soap water like the caterpillars will work or not. If these cocoons hatch they become the moth version of this pest often called hummingbird moths or hawk moths. They will mate and lay eggs soon after hatching and are capable of traveling long distances. You would be most likely to see them at your porch light during the late evening or at night.

My Tomato Killers

My Tomato Killers

A few more interesting facts about hornworm caterpillars is that you can sometimes locate them via the droppings “frass” they leave behind or below them while feeding. Apparently I scared the “frass” out of the one in my bucket if you look at the picture *ewww* If you see these signature little markers look above them to locate your plant devourer. Also in the picture you can note what the much younger version of the caterpillar looks like. They are very similar in appearance but the younger one does not have markings as distinct along its sides but that name inspiring horn is still there. The hornworm has a natural enemy too, the parasitic wasps (braconid wasps) often target caterpillars to lay their eggs in. Though you will not know if this has occurred until you see the tell tale white cocoons on the worms back. The cocoons look kind of like grains of rice stuck to the worm. If you happen to find a hornworm that has been parasitized you may want to take it with a leaf put well down into a glass jar in your garden so that the caterpillar can no longer do any more damage to your garden and the wasps will hatch, kill the host and hunt other hornworms from your garden and kill them and other pests as well.

Evil Plant Eating Mobs

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Posted by Aimee | Posted in Compost, Experiments, Insects | Posted on 30-04-2009

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The weather here lately in the Houston area has been downright sopping wet. As I am sure many of you heard or saw large areas of Houston were flooded Tuesday, so much so I did not even get into work until 9:30A.M. I was fortunate enough to not have to sit in traffic, rather we waited to go to work until after the roadways had been cleared.

With all this water I was a little worried about my plants. My fancy, high tech shade providing devices (card board boxes) got so soggy they fell over on-top of the plants they were intended to protect and started squashing them. I braved the weather for just long enough to pull the boxes out of my raised garden beds and dart back indoors.

Potatoes Growing Crazy

Potatoes Growing Crazy

I am extremely glad to report that after a good once over this evening I am sure my plants are all doing well. Especially the potatoes! The only thing not intentionally planted is doing the best, though I attribute a lot of this to the fact that they were planted straight into compost and I have applied Micro-Life fertilizer to them and since all the rain and warm weather will not wash the nitrogen out and burn the plants like it can with non-organic fertilizers they are doing fantastic. They are a beautiful deep green and other than having to pick a couple of unidentified caterpillars off of them they are doing amazing, growing faster than any weed I have ever seen even.

About those caterpillars though, I should have taken a picture because the only picture I found that matched how they looked exactly labels it as an army caterpillar but by looking up pictures of army caterpillars I am rather unconvinced that is a correct identification. The caterpillar was velvety smooth looking and was black with two vivid, thin yellow stripes on its upper sides, almost so high they would be on its back. I may go out with a flashlight and see if I can find any more of these. Then I will get a picture put up and maybe one of you other Houston area gardeners can identify him for me.

I most certainly cannot have them eating those beautiful potato plants or my tomato plants either. I had read that potatoes were rather hard to grow in this area just like asparagus and peaches. I was worried enough about how well they would grow I almost just turned them under, now I am exceedingly glad I let them stay. Who knows if I will get any potatoes or not but the plants themselves look absolutely gorgeous! Here’s hoping there won’t be any more flooding!