![]() |
| Fungus gnat larva with mycelia, walnut husk fly larva and unknown brown pupa cases. |
These butternuts had been down a while and their husks were starting to blacken. While inspecting one of them, I found some tiny 2-3mm hair-like strands that I mistook for fungal mycelia until under magnification I saw that they moved as seen in this video. I showed them to Chris Barnhart and he identified them as "fungal" all right, but actually the larvae of the fungus gnat.Technically walnuts are not nuts but are classified as a drupe because of the fleshy covering on a hard pit or stone. Other flowering plants classified as drupe producers include the almond, cherry, apricot, peach, nectarine, plum and our beloved coffee. Like our common black walnuts, the product we treasure is not the flesh but the nut inside. As the flesh breaks down, fungal hyphae frequently contribute to the disintegration, providing a home for the fungus gnat.
| Sciarcidae - 2mm long + antennae |
Most fungus gnats occur as larvae feeding on fungi in the soil, emerging as adults to walk around and weakly fly on occasion. They carry mushroom spores and are incidental pollinators. A few species of larva are predatory, killing small invertebrates with an acid fluid (mostly oxalic acid) secreted by labial glands.
The gnats occasional bother us larger bipeds by flying in our faces and they may be confused with bathroom flies. Numbers of them in your house may indicate over watering of house plants. As you might expect, there are a number of toxins developed for their elimination in greenhouses.
Most organisms tolerate winter by either freezing (with the help of antifreeze chemicals they produce) or avoiding it. Some fungus gnats produce antifreeze proteins but Excechia nugatoria has it both ways. The head and thorax are protected by the production of (your new word of the day) noncolligative antifreeze proteins (NAPs) while the abdomen freezes, thus reducing evaporative water loss. How cool is that!
![]() |
| Fungus gnat larval procession |


