Dealing with Earwigs in your Vegetable Garden

, written by Barbara Pleasant us flag

Earwigs in the vegetable garden

Like most gardeners, I first became acquainted with earwigs (Forficula auricularia) when I moved a big clay pot and saw them scurry away from their snug spot beneath it. They were not a problem that year, or in many seasons since, but this year is different. Last week they ate a flat of cosmos seedlings and chewed several herbs I had growing on the deck, and my first head of cabbage had a gang of earwigs hiding in the outer leaves.

I'm reluctant to engage in direct earwig control because they are not always harmful. While earwigs do eat leaves and fruits from a long list of plants, they also consume small soft-bodied insects. But especially in rainy years, earwigs in the garden become so numerous that they turn up everywhere and eat things you wish they wouldn't, like the poor basil below. Evidence of earwig feeding includes leaves with holes that have ragged edges, or are only partially rasped through, and a light scattering of very small black particles of earwig excrement.

Earwig damage to basil leaf

The Earwig Ick Factor

Some people are unreasonably icked out by earwigs, in part because they look so threatening. In fact, gardeners who take snakes and spiders in stride are sometimes fearful of earwigs. Originally from Europe, the common earwig has spread to temperate climates throughout the world.

Personally, you have nothing to fear from earwigs. The pincers on their hind ends are used for mating, not biting, and they don't get into people's ears. Emergency room records indicate that another insect (rhymes with coach) is the bad one. And consider: earwigs in the garden inhabit the moist, dark world of plants and pots and mulch outdoors, and should they come indoors at all it would be to set up housekeeping in a basement rather than a bedroom. In her book, The Earwig's Tale, writer May Berenbaum notes that "the reluctance of earwigs to fly would seem to reduce the probability of their gaining access to the ears of anyone who doesn't habitually sleep with his head jammed into basement corners."

Earwig oil pit trap

Efficient Earwig Traps

Wherever they are, earwigs are easy to trap in homemade traps as long as you choose the right method for the job. Earwigs feed at night and gather in sheltered places during the day, so most earwig traps use attractive habitat, or refuge, as their lure.

The exception is the oil pit trap, developed by entomologist Whitney Cranshaw. The best earwig trap to use in the open garden, an oil pit trap is simply a small plastic container with lid, with an entry hole cut in the lid. When baited with canola or olive oil, with a little bacon grease, fish oil or soy sauce sprinkled in for aroma, and sunk into the garden so the lid is flush with the surface, one of these earwig traps can clean up a cabbage patch fast. You won't catch innocent victims, because earwigs are the only garden creatures attracted to the traps, which will need to be emptied and refilled every week or so.

Earwig newspaper trap

Another good way to trap earwigs in the garden is to roll lightly dampened newspapers into hollow tubes, tie them with thread or lightweight cotton string, and place them among plants that are under attack by earwigs. After a few days the earwigs will set up housekeeping in the newspaper tubes, which can be gathered up and composted. Short pieces of hollow bamboo the thickness of your finger can be used in the same way.

A similar reusable earwig trap can be made by placing plastic drinking straws inside a piece of plastic pipe. Earwigs seem to like plastic though it provides no purchase for their little feet. A couple of taps into a bowl of soapy water, and the earwigs come tumbling out of a drinking straw trap.

Earwigs can become persistent pests of peaches and other tree fruits, in which case cardboard earwig traps tied to trunks and lateral branches are in order. But you don't want to catch all of the earwigs, or at least not until late summer. Until then, research from Utah State University shows that earwigs do more good than harm by eating aphids and other small insects. But when fruits start to soften with ripeness, earwigs can become a problem.

Earwig tree trap

To trap them, all you will need is some corrugated cardboard and strips of cloth to tie the traps to branches. Scientists use one-sided corrugated cardboard, which you can make by wetting one side of a piece of corrugated cardboard, and then prying it off. Make into a small roll, and fasten to trunks and major limbs. Install earwig traps a month before the fruit is expected to ripen, and replace once a week.

As for me, after this year's losses, I will take more care to disinvite earwigs to the area where I grow my seedlings. Earwigs stick together in groups, and I found the ones that were eating my seedlings hiding in the dry crevices between plastic pots and the trays used to hold them. It was a perfect set-up for them – rest under the moist pots during the day, come out and eat tender young leaves at night with no aggravation from frogs and other predators. Oops, my mistake.

By Barbara Pleasant

Bugs, Beneficial Insects and Plant Diseases

< All Guides

Garden Planning Apps

If you need help designing your vegetable garden, try our Vegetable Garden Planner.
Garden Planning Apps and Software

Vegetable Garden Pest Warnings

Want to Receive Alerts When Pests are Heading Your Way?

If you've seen any pests or beneficial insects in your garden in the past few days please report them to The Big Bug Hunt and help create a warning system to alert you when bugs are heading your way.

Show Comments



Comments

 
"What did you insulate your cabinet with? How is it holding up now? I am making a smoker out of almost the same thing and am curious"
Nanhendo on Friday 5 June 2015
"Thank you so much for this timely article. I just cleaned out all the weeds that enjoyed setting up home in a veggie box I never planted veggies in last year (medical issues kept me from gardening). There are a TON of earwigs in there now and I am completely freaked out by them. I'll be getting my jar and lid together and planting it out there this week!"
Kim on Monday 8 June 2015
"The oil traps work great. I left an open container sitting on the deck with a small amount of oil in it, and the earwigs found a way to crawl in and drown."
Barbara Pleasant on Wednesday 10 June 2015
"We have been fighting earwigs for the last couple weeks but I now think we are winning. Persistence prevails."
Sandy on Wednesday 5 April 2017
"Sandy, are you using oil traps? Interested to know which control methods are working for you."
Barbara Pleasant on Wednesday 5 April 2017
"For trapping earwigs we used the smallest paper cups we could find and filled them about half way with Canola oil and a small amount of soy sauce, sunk them to ground level and it worked like a champ. Then we baited snails and slugs with a mixture of yeast, water, and sugar, this also worked like a champ for the snails and slugs, but the interesting thing was the earwigs also liked it :-). It only took a few days to rid the garden of most of the unwanted pests. Happy trapping!"
Sandy on Wednesday 5 April 2017
"Get ducks. Khaki Campbells to be exact. They eat almost every bad bug you can imagine and provide a very tasty egg each day, and a lot of entertainment. We have watched them eat earwigs, slugs, japanese beetles,yellow jacket wasps and flies on the run. Even though we have had a VERY damp season in Pennsylvania this year, the ducks have taken care of the earwigs. In other wet years, earwigs were so prolific, they even climbed up plants like broccoli and made home in them until the plant turned to mush."
Scheewitchen on Sunday 24 September 2017
"Sceewitchen I'm kicking myself for not doing what this article said. I didn't realize I had such a bad infestation of earwigs. I didn't know earwigs had taken up residence inside each of my corncobs. They killed all my corn this year. I couldn't understand why they didn't grow like they were supposed to until I ripped one open and saw 3 earwigs in it :("
Kelli on Monday 25 September 2017
"I think I spotted one in my bathroom this morning, which took shelter when I turned on the light. I'm hoping it's there to eat the silverfish! Thanks for your article. More recent findings online don't mention anything but fruits and vegetables as their diet."
Jean Hohl on Thursday 9 January 2020
"The ends are used for biting - just pick one up - not that they can hurt you - just a little pinch."
john on Thursday 21 May 2020
"When I was 4 years old, I was laying on the grass with my ear down. And earwig crawled into my ear. I kind of freaked out that something was inside my ear. The mom next door calmly took a flashlight and shined it in my ear. Out crawled the earwig, looking for someplace dark to hang out. So, they're called EARwigs for a reason. Maybe don't lay on the grass with your ear to the ground. "
Tom on Tuesday 7 July 2020
"How big should the hole in the oil trap be?"
Bruce on Tuesday 25 August 2020
"I will try some of these tips for earwigs.I hate Them!!! "
Willow on Tuesday 2 March 2021
"The earwigs have destroyed the veggies in my raised beds over the last two weeks...And now, ruining my potted flowers...I think they moved on to the flowers after I placed oil/soy traps in the raised beds. I feel like I'm at war with these buggers! I've never seen it so bad, killing even the marigolds! I've sprayed soap and water and now, bought a spray from the hardware store."
Lisa on Wednesday 30 June 2021
"All solutions just move them around and don't get rid of the nests. years.The only one that truely rids them was given to me by the Dept. of Agriculture and actually worked. Get chickens ! Earwigs were gone for 12 yrs."
Lee on Monday 19 June 2023

Add a Comment

Add your own thoughts on the subject of this article:
(If you have difficulty using this form, please use our Contact Form to send us your comment, along with the title of this article.)



(We won't display this on the website or use it for marketing)



Captcha


(Please enter the code above to help prevent spam on this article)



By clicking 'Add Comment' you agree to our Terms and Conditions