![]() Adult females lay large clusters of eggs, which explains why there may be more than one worm in your toilet. These pests live off of sewage and decaying matter, which makes your toilet a perfect location for them. ![]() If you spot tiny black worms in your toilet, they are probably drain fly larvae. The adult horsehair worms are free-living in fresh water and damp soil. They may also be found on damp garden soil after a rain. ![]() Horsehair worms are also found in streams and ponds and in domestic water containers such as bird baths, swimming pools, backyard ponds and pet dishes. The “head” end (calotte) is unpigmented and only slightly set off from the rest of the body the mouth is at or near this tip. Both tips of the body are blunt and rounded. The bodies are cylindrical in cross-section (not flattened). They are not segmented like earthworms or leeches. They can attack a wide variety of insects and related animals: grasshoppers, crickets, cockroaches, beetles, and katydids, as well as dragonflies, caddisflies, millipedes, centipedes, spiders, crustaceans, leeches, snails, slugs and other invertebrates. Once they hatch, immature horsehair worms try to infect a host. Immature stages are internal parasites of grasshoppers, crickets, cockroaches, beetles, and other insects and millipedes and centipedes. Adult worms are free-living and non-parasitic. Horsehair worms are not harmful to humans, domestic animals, or plants.
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