Plant SOS · Pests
I see insects
on my plant
Discovering insects on your plant is always an alarm signal — and rightly so. Pests reproduce quickly, and a mild infestation can become severe in a few weeks if left untreated. The first rule: immediately isolate the affected plant to prevent contamination of others.
But before treating, you need to identify. Mealybugs, spider mites, aphids, fungus gnats — each pest has its distinctive signs and specific treatment. Incorrect treatment is useless, and may even worsen the situation. This guide gives you the keys to effectively identify and eliminate each pest.

First step: isolate immediately
As soon as you spot insects on a plant, move it away from others first and foremost. Most pests spread through direct contact — touching leaves, water splashes, clothing. An isolated plant can no longer contaminate the rest of your collection.
Place it in a separate room if possible, or at least a meter away from other plants. Then inspect neighboring plants: they may already be affected without you having noticed.
"Isolate first, identify next, treat last.
In that order, not the other way around."
1. Fungus gnats — sciarids
Small black gnats flying around the pot
Fungus gnats are small black gnats about 2mm long that flutter around the soil and plant. They are attracted to moist substrates where they lay their eggs. It is the larvae — invisible to the naked eye — that cause damage by feeding on fine roots.
Good news: adults do not attack plants. It is the larvae that weaken the roots. A mild infestation is rarely fatal, but a severe infestation can seriously weaken the plant.
2. Mealybugs
White cottony substance on stems and leaves
Mealybugs are immediately recognizable by their appearance: a white, cottony or woolly substance that looks like mold or cotton. They cluster in leaf axils, along stems, and under foliage. They suck sap and excrete sticky honeydew that promotes the development of black sooty mold.
3. Spider mites
Tiny dots + fine webs under leaves
Spider mites are microscopic mites — barely visible to the naked eye. They are mainly recognized by their damage: yellow or beige spots evenly distributed on the leaf blade, and fine silken webs under the leaves and between the stems. They proliferate in hot, dry air, especially in winter with heating.
4. Aphids
Small green, black or white insects on new shoots
Aphids are among the easiest pests to identify: they are visible to the naked eye, grouped in colonies on new shoots, buds, and the undersides of leaves. They suck sap from the tender parts of the plant and excrete sticky honeydew. They reproduce very quickly — a colony can double in a few days.
5. Whiteflies
Cloud of small white flies with slightest movement
Whiteflies are small, winged white insects that fly up in a cloud when the plant is shaken. Their larvae remain fixed under the leaves and suck sap. Less common than other indoor pests, they can nevertheless spread quickly and are sometimes resistant to conventional treatments.
⚠ Golden rule of treatments
Never treat just once and wait. All pests have a reproductive cycle — eggs hatch after the first treatment. You must repeat treatment every 5 to 7 days for at least 3 weeks to break this cycle. A single treatment is never enough.
Preventing infestations
The best strategy against pests remains prevention. Regularly inspect the undersides of your leaves — once a week is enough. Infestations detected early can be treated in a few days; detected late, they can take months.
Maintain good ambient humidity: most pests (spider mites in particular) proliferate in dry air. Avoid grouping newly purchased plants with your existing collection without a 2-week quarantine period. And consider a preventative neem oil treatment once a month in spring and summer.
Summary table — identify your pest
| What you see | Probable pest | Key treatment | Duration |
|---|---|---|---|
| Black gnats flying near soil | Fungus gnats | Dry soil + yellow traps + neem | 3–4 weeks |
| White cottony substance on stems | Mealybugs | 70% alcohol + neem oil | 3 weeks |
| Yellow spots + fine webs under leaves | Spider mites | Cold water + neem + humidity | 3–4 weeks |
| Green/black insects on new shoots | Aphids | Water spray + black soap | 2 weeks |
| White cloud with every movement | Whiteflies | Yellow traps + neem | 4 weeks |
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Launch diagnosis🌿 Guide written by the Douceur Maison Plant SOS team.
We write practical guides to help enthusiasts take care of their indoor plants. · sosplantes@douceurmaison.fr
