No-See-Ums in South Florida: The Invisible Pest Making Your Backyard Unbearable. You step outside at dusk. No mosquitoes in sight. No visible reason to go back inside. And then it starts – an intense, burning itch across your arms, ankles, and neck that gets worse over the next several hours.
You never saw anything. You never heard anything. But something was absolutely there. That is no-see-ums. And if you live in South Florida, you have almost certainly experienced them – even if you did not know what to call them.
No-see-ums are biting midges, scientifically classified as Ceratopogonidae. The University of Florida/IFAS Entomology Department describes biting midges as typically one to three millimeters in length — small enough to pass through standard window screens and nearly invisible to the naked eye at rest.
Despite their size, their bite punches well above its weight. The Florida Department of Health notes that biting midge saliva contains compounds that trigger a significant inflammatory response in many people. The result is a small, intensely itchy welt that can persist for days — often more pronounced than a mosquito bite.
They are not mosquitoes. They are not gnats. They are a separate species with their own biology, breeding habits, and peak activity windows. Understanding the difference matters because the treatment approach is different.
“How do I make these mosquitoes stop ruining my life without bathing my family in chemicals?”
No-see-ums breed in wet, organic-rich substrates. UF/IFAS identifies mangrove areas, salt marshes, moist soil, mudflats, and the edges of freshwater bodies as prime breeding habitat for Florida biting midges. South Florida has an abundance of all of it.
Palm Beach County and the Treasure Coast sit along coastlines, waterways, and natural areas that provide exactly the conditions no-see-ums need to breed in large numbers. Communities near the Intracoastal Waterway, canal systems, natural preserves, and coastal mangrove areas tend to experience the highest no-see-um pressure.
Florida’s rainy season amplifies the problem significantly. The South Florida Water Management District reports that South Florida receives 50 to 60 inches of rainfall annually, concentrated in the June through September rainy season. That rainfall creates new breeding sites, raises soil moisture levels, and accelerates larval development across the region.
No-see-ums are most active during low-wind conditions at dawn and dusk. They are weak fliers. Any consistent wind above about eight miles per hour grounds them effectively.
That activity window – the golden hour before and after sunset that most South Florida residents want to enjoy in their backyard — is precisely when no-see-um pressure is at its highest. Calm evenings after rainfall are the worst conditions.
UF/IFAS Extension notes that overcast days also extend no-see-um activity beyond the usual dawn and dusk periods, as the insects are sensitive to direct sunlight and heat.
This is the part that frustrates most South Florida homeowners. Standard mosquito treatments — whether foggers, barrier sprays, or consumer repellents – are designed around mosquito biology and behavior. No-see-ums have different breeding sites, different flight patterns, and different harborage areas.
The EPA notes that DEET-based repellents offer some protection against biting insects generally, but are less effective against no-see-ums than against mosquitoes. The small size of biting midges allows them to probe through repellent-treated skin more readily than larger insects.
UF/IFAS Extension recommends picaridin-based repellents as more effective against biting midges specifically. Fine mesh screens — marketed as no-see-um screens – with openings of 16 by 16 mesh or smaller will exclude them from screened enclosures where standard insect screening will not.
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