• A must-have for houseplants, gardening and small farm. ONLY for common flying plant pest, NOT for house / indoor pest issue like fruit flies, mosquitos, bugs.
  • ECO friendly material, safe and easy to peel off and use.
  • Great for capturing aphids, leaf miners, fungus gnats, thrips, white flies, black flies and midges.
  • Dimension: 6*8 inches; Pack of 10 pcs; Wire ties included.
  • KINDLY NOTE - This product is for trapping flying plant insect only, good for outdoor plant or houseplant, but not applicable for other home pest in house / kitchen / garage like fruit flies, mosquitos and bugs.

These traps are great. Cost effective and easy to use. I cut them down and stuck them to wooden coffee stirrers and put into the soil. They've so far caught many fungus gnats. They can also be laid flat across the flower pot to make a good barrier if one plant requires more protection. I like these much better than the ones that come with plastic sticks and the sticky traps are folded into loops. These offer much more surface area and more flexibility for use.

I’m going to give the product a five even though it didn’t completely solve my problem solely because it did what it should: it killed and retained the bugs stupid enough to fly into it. Unfortunately, a lot of those idiots had friends and family flying around who weren’t as stupid. However, if you diligently change out the sticky traps every other day or so, and spread them out the distance the manufacturer suggests, you should see an improvement over the weeks to come. That of course depends on the extent and species of infestation involved (shudder and long sigh). My husband surprised me with a 3 piece bromeliad plant set from Home Depot just because he is a sweet guy. He didn’t realize that it was infested with tiny gnats (or something similar) that invaded ALL my house plants and have multiplied unmercifully since late September. It is in-Aunt-Fanny-believable the number of these creatures that have been trapped and killed. If you figure I cut up a sheet into 6 or 8 pieces and spread them out onto the plants (about 12 go out every other day and then I change them because they have literally killed dozens on each of them- some even more, ugh), I am grossed out and shocked. The first time I put them out was the most bountiful. There really was a massacre and the sheets were full. I didn’ t take a picture because I thought, eh, I’m done. I thought I would put out a another day’s worth to catch the stragglers we saw buzzing around. I could NOT believe the DOZENS and DOZENS that were in the traps the SECOND & THIRD times. To this day, WEEKS later, after doing it at a steady pace, things are admittedly better, but we are still getting a pretty good bounty and changing the sheets every 3 days. I’m afraid to stop and give them another toehold into the plants and let them start breeding again at a steady pace. I really don’t want to have to bring toxic chemicals into play! I think these eventually (at least I hope) will help eradicate the problem. I will try to update this at a later date.

These work great!!! We just put a raised garden in and bought 6 yards of composted formulated garden soil. Because of the compost and several rains we got an infestation of fungus nats. These little bugs were killing our garden plants because the larvae feed and eat the root hairs which is how the plants absorbs water and nutrients. I used 12 inch landscape staples to secure the paper to the soil . Put in a bend in the paper seems to work even better and the landscape staples firmly secured the paper to the ground close to where the Nats come up out of the soil. Amazon sells the 12 inch long Staples and I found that this was by far easier way to install the trap paper . VERY IMPORTANT, this is only part of the treatment, nematodes is the second part for a garden. Nematodes feed on the fungus nat larvae and it is the knockout punch, which you can also buy on Amazon. These yellow traps work fantastic on attracting the adults, they also work on a large variety of other pest. One other thing about fungus nats, on the web you will find many sites telling you to dry out the soil to kill the larvae, this will work if you are not growing plants at the time or if you are cooking the soil with black plastic; but I have also read the larvae will hibernate and out last the plants if trying to dry out the soil. These sticky traps are a safe 2 part action plan to really address a infestation. I did considerable amount of research on this subject and I feel the trap paper combined with the nematodes is the best solution if you have a real infestation in your garden . An added benefit, we didn’t have nats flying into eyes, noises or ears anymore! WooHooo!

It does take a while so you have to be very patient, but these work! You have to wait days and weeks for the new gnats to hatch and get caught. These are fantastic and I would buy them again and have recommended then to others.

I AM SO HAPPY.HAPPY.HAPPY with these sticky sheets and I JUST PUT THEM UP YESTERDAY!! Within 10 mins of installing them I HAD MOSQUITOES, gnats and "no-see-ums" stuck to them!! Today (4-21-17) I checked them and they are covered with all kinds of flying insects...mosquitoes that make me VERY happy to see, but also, QUEEN FIRE ANTS!! I could not be more pleased! Also...just as other reviews stated, NOT ONE SINGLE BEE is stuck on any of them and I have sage bushes right beside my back patio area where I hung the strips and they are covered with bee activity right now! HIGHLY recommended!! Get these!! I am not paid, didn't receive free ones for my review...I am just a 100% pleased customer! We will order more of these as needed! Thank you! Updated: I added photos from just one day after hanging my sticky sheets...Mosquitoes, gnats, no-see-ums, QUEEN FIRE ANTS!! All kinds of flying critters and NOT ONE SINGLE BEE OR BUTTERFLY!! Very happy customers here in Texas!!

I bought these for fruit trees in our backyard in Southern California. We had issues with leaf miners and other pests last year and wanted to get out in front of it this year. So far they've been great, I had two sheets out less than a week and they filled up so much I had to replace them. I'm not sure which kinds of insects are on the sheets, so I'm adding photos.

Never thought I would be writing a review for a product like this, but about a little over a week ago I thought my beautiful bearded Irises & Meyer Lemon shrub were toast. This year whiteflies invaded my patio container plants in force. Spraying helped but within 24 hours they were back. After reading up on the 3-prong approach (washing leaves off with water, saturating leaves with insecticidal soap spray, and hanging sticky yellow sheets), I was ready to do battle. I was most skeptical about the sticky sheets... really the whiteflies would fly right into them? Better than chemical defense? The answer is yes and yes. These sheets are a good size, the waxy paper that protects the sticky sides are not difficult to remove. The extra long twisties that come with the sheets are a very convenient length. I hung three sheets out not more than 5 - 12 inches from the afflicted plants, shook the leaves of my plants and a bunch of whiteflies scattered. But on their flight back, promptly aiming their way back to my plants (little vampires!) they detoured to the yellow sheet and zap! Stuck. I washed the leaves, sprayed them with insecticidal soap. It was impossible to spray all the whiteflies as they flew off the plant during the wash/spray interval; I hoped that when they tried to settle again, they would get 'detoured' by the sticky sheets. Next day without too great an expectation, I checked the sheets. Zowie .. hundreds of the little buggers. On both sides. Now about a week since I first hung the sheets, my plants are perking up, unfurling new green baby leaves, and have an overall better color. I think my plants are going to make it. Every day I check the sheets and my plants; now there are only two or three whiteflies here & there on the leaves. The sticky sheets keep filling up. I am going to keep up with the three prong approach and annihilate them. This is war!

My apartment has a terrible problem with fruit flies and drain flies, and they do NOT respond to any of the usual tricks. I tried regular flypaper as well, but drain flies especially tend to hang out on walls and ceilings and the odds that they'll run into a strip of paper is just not that great. The best thing about these sheets is how versatile they are. When dealing with drain flies, I often peel off the backing on just one side, bait it (a tiny bit of honey or maple syrup works really well), and lay it flat on a surface near where they like to hang out. They flock there in droves. When that side is full, I lay the wax paper back on the used side so it's covered and then just flip it over and bait the other side. We've even cut them into different shapes to fit bathroom counters, etc. I have a few that I've hung up in the way they're intended to be used, mostly around my rabbit's litterbox because that thing is a fly magnet no matter what I do, and the wide surface area means that, if you place them where the flies tend to congregate, you catch a lot more of them than you do with the narrow strips. This is by far my go-to means of dealing with drain and fruit flies, and I would strongly suggest it (along with cleaning your drains, etc.) to anyone who is not having luck with the usual methods.

Recently, I bought a bag of Miracle Gro soil contaminated with fungus gnats for my plants at work. Anyone who tells you fungus gnats aren't a huge issue were definitely lying. My entire office has been locked in a literal war with these fungus gnats... there's slapping and swearing almost every single day. Finally, I decided to take ownership of the problem I created and take some extreme measures to fix the problem once and for all. I have been cutting up pieces of this yellow sticky trap and laying it horizontally across all of my plants to catch any of the adult gnats. Additionally, I ended up watering all my plants with a blend of hydrogen peroxide and water to kill the larvae. 3 weeks later, I can say that these traps most definitely work. Not only do they catch the pesky adult fungus gnats, they also catch moths and other buggers that happen to land on your plants. These traps are so sticky that you can see the fungus gnats literally just perched on top, and the bottoms of their icky little legs just get stuck and they're unable to leave again. Fantastic! Whatever science behind how the yellow color attracts them is definitely real and I can attest to the fact that these work like a charm. This is definitely something you want to have in your arsenal when waging war against fungus gnats!

These things are insane. We are currently dealing with an infestation of fungus gnats. It's terribly annoying and kind of gross. I got these bad boys and I am at once both delighted and disgusted. They catch so many gnats. I had no idea there were so many gnats in our house. But there they are. And the gnats don't care that their gnat brethren all stuck to the paper. They just fly on over to the magic yellow sheet and keep getting stuck until the paper is literally black with gnats. And then you just replace it and watch with morbid fascination as gnats continue to fly to their sad little gnat deaths. The absolute best thing? These aren't sticky like fly paper. Like fly paper that I refuse to use because frankly it's more gross than I can handle. These sheets are pretty sticky but the couple of times I've accidentally gotten them stuck on my fingers, I can pull it off fairly easily and there is not some clump of nasty residue permanently fixed to my finger. Get these! I've read that they are great for outside too and that 'good bugs' aren't drawn to it. I'd believe it as we have several friendly spiders in our house that I am trying to resist squishing because I want them to help us by eating gnats and I haven't found any spiders stuck on them.