this post was submitted on 28 Nov 2023
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Houseplants
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This may be a bit of an unusual recommendation, but I've found biological warfare to be the best solution for fungus gnats: Drosera capensis, Cape sundews, are like nature's bug vacuum.
There is a bit of time waiting for the plant to get ready to go, maybe a month to six weeks, but they require virtually no care aside from ensuring they're in a bath of water at all times, and they absolutely EVISCERATE gnat populations. I used to have a terrible problem with them until last year when I got my first D. capensis, and roughly counting, one plant in a month caught over 170 bugs. They're super fun to own and their colors are dazzling.
https://highlandmoss.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/IMG_3733-scaled.jpg
https://preview.redd.it/because-fungus-gnats-carnivorous-plant-haul-v0-8k97rhklvalb1.jpg?width=1080&crop=smart&auto=webp&s=2bfdad871281b204f19eec0985141d261ec6f156
Thank you for the recommendation! I've definitely considered carnivorous plants. Actually I ended up throwing all my plants in water last month (except for some succulents which weren't part of the problem) to convert all of my plants to a semi-hydro system instead. I haven't seen a fungus gnat since! Once it warms up outside and I can rinse off the substrate with a hoze I'll be potting them up in a soilless mix.