Fear not the earwig: these insects are perfect garden friends and very unlikely to find a home in your ear

By Gardens Illustrated Team

Published: Tuesday, 19 September 2023 at 11:51 AM


‘Earwig’ is not a name to generate affection. The thought of these creatures nipping through one’s eardrum with their forceps like pincers is the stuff of nightmares. Gardeners know how partial they are to flower petals, especially those prize dahlia blooms, but there is much more to earwigs than their fearsome exterior as Fran Sconce, Entomologist and Royal Entomological Society Outreach Officer explains.

Earwigs are not dangerous, nor are they poisonous or harmful to humans in any way

Earwigs, order Dermaptera, are ‘orthopteroid’ insects and are closely related to grasshoppers, crickets and cockroaches. They are easily recognised by the pincers known as ‘cerci’ at their rear end and are often feared because of their appearance. They are, however, not dangerous, nor are they poisonous or harmful to humans in any way. The cerci, curved in males and straight in females, are there to protect them from natural predators; toads, birds, beetles and bats to name but a few.

Earwigs hide away by day in dark, damp crevices amongst plant debris

One of the most common of our insect-related ‘Old Wives’ Tales’ is that of the earwig crawling into a human ear to lay their eggs. Thankfully this is nothing more than a myth! Earwigs are nocturnal creatures that hide away by day in dark, damp crevices amongst plant debris and log piles. They are much more likely to be found in a loose piece of bark than in an ear canal but the likely origins of its name are probably the source of our aversion.

Hind wing of Forificula © Peter Barnard

The Old English word ‘earwicga’ means ‘ear creature’ and is likely to have been attributed to this insect due to the shape of their beautiful, shell-like (and rarely seen) wings. The etymology of the classification Dermaptera similarly derives from the Greek ‘Skin Wings’ and well explains their gossamer-like appearance.