Fungus gnats in terrariums: yes it happens, here's how to handle it
Tiny black flies buzzing around your terrarium? Probably fungus gnats. Causes, fixes, and prevention.
Fungus gnats are tiny black flies (1-3mm) that hover around moist soil. They’re annoying but rarely harmful to terrarium plants. Here’s how to deal with them.
How they get in
- Through open windows
- On new plants you bring in
- In contaminated substrate
- On your hands if you’ve been handling other plants
Once they’re in a moist terrarium, they’ll multiply fast.
Why they’re not usually a problem
Fungus gnat larvae live in the top layer of substrate and eat:
- Fungus (yes, the same fungus that terrariums grow)
- Decaying organic matter
- Algae
They don’t typically eat living plant roots (unless the population is huge).
When they ARE a problem
- Massive populations (hundreds visible)
- They’re damaging seedling roots
- They’re flying into your face constantly
In a typical terrarium, fungus gnats are an annoyance, not a crisis.
The fixes
Step 1: Let it dry out
Fungus gnat larvae need moisture. If your terrarium is overwatered, drying it out will kill larvae.
- Open the lid for a few days
- Stop misting
- Let the top inch of substrate dry
Step 2: Sticky traps
Yellow sticky traps placed in or near the terrarium catch adults. Break the breeding cycle.
Step 3: Beneficial nematodes
Steinernema feltiae nematodes eat fungus gnat larvae. Available online, terrarium- safe. Mix with water and apply to substrate.
Step 4: Bottom watering only
If you have an open terrarium, water from the bottom (in drainage layer) instead of top. The top stays dry = no gnat breeding.
Step 5: Hydrogen peroxide mix (emergency)
For severe infestations:
- Mix 1 part 3% hydrogen peroxide to 4 parts water
- Apply to substrate surface
- Kills larvae on contact
- Repeat weekly until cleared
Use sparingly — can harm beneficial microbes.
Prevention
For new builds:
- Use fresh, sterile substrate (don’t reuse old)
- Quarantine new plants for 1-2 weeks before adding
- Don’t overwater
- Add springtails (they compete with gnat larvae)
The bottom line
A few fungus gnats = annoying, not dangerous. Hundreds of fungus gnats = act, follow the steps above.
In a bioactive terrarium with healthy springtails, fungus gnats rarely become a problem — the springtails outcompete the larvae.
When to start over
Fungus gnats alone rarely warrant a rebuild. Only if combined with:
- Major plant decline
- Smell
- Mold
Then see the diagnosis flowchart.
Ask in the Discord if your infestation feels overwhelming.