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What are These Insect Eggs?

Insect eggs mixed with dark debris on a deck.I found tons of those eggs in the soil and around the root system of a house plant I was transplanting. What are they?

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An egg on the lid of a gallon of milk.
 

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Silver Post Medal for All Time! 267 Posts
August 9, 20200 found this helpful
Best Answer

I think those might be balls of fertilizer from the potting soil. They disintegrate over time to feed the potted plant.

 

Bronze Post Medal for All Time! 105 Posts
August 9, 20200 found this helpful
Best Answer

Companies are now making potting soil that has fertilizers inside of it. On the bag, it will tell you how long the fertilizer is good for. In order to meet these claims, the company adds fertilizer balls to the potting soil that will release slowing into the soil over the length of time the bag says it will. The reason this happened was back in 2014 different companies received a lot of complaints about the potting soil they sold. The different people told these companies that their potting soil came with fungus gnats in the potting soil.

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If you have purchased a potting soil that has a fertilizer in the bag then it is normal to see these balls on the top of the bag of soil or even mixed in with the soil. If you did not purchase a bag with a fertilizer then you need to be alarmed with the balls you are seeing in the house plants. Normal insect eggs are not the same as the balls of fertilizer and these balls have a different color to them.

 

Bronze Feedback Medal for All Time! 196 Feedbacks
August 9, 20200 found this helpful

I tend to agree with Jess that these do not look like eggs. Some places use Styrofoam stuff (not sure if that is the exact material) but like Styrofoam in potting soil to aerate it and it gets into white clumps like this.

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I usually pull it out and toss it or it could be as she says, fertilizer balls.

 

Silver Answer Medal for All Time! 425 Answers
August 9, 20200 found this helpful

I think those are either slow-release fertilizer pellets OR Silica Gel pellets to help hold moisture in the soil...they act like a sponge to hold water and release slowly.

 

Gold Feedback Medal for All Time! 949 Feedbacks
August 13, 20200 found this helpful

Your full picture shows what appears to be white 'balls' but the single looks to be brown so do they change color?
You do not say how long you have had this soil in a pot but if it has been a long time then it seems to me that slow release fertilizer would have broken down and these look pretty solid.

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University sites say you can sometimes tell if it is slow release by squeezing one and if fertilizer it will be a liquid.

I had slugs one year and some of my pots had similar looking 'balls' (but I also had some in small 'groups') and my county agent told me these were slugs.

You can send your picture to your county extension agency fi you're still not sure.

ask.extension.org/ask

 

Bronze Post Medal for All Time! 140 Posts
August 15, 20200 found this helpful

These are fertilize pellets , that are located in most potting soils , also when you purchase new plants/flowers in pots. This fertilizer is blended into soil and will give off a slow release to disappear in the following months and provides continuance of feeding.

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This can also be moisture beads. This is also something that is added to soil to hold liquid in plants/flowers at nurseries . donotdisturbgardening.com/.../

 
August 15, 20200 found this helpful

Hi,

I agree that these look like they may have come, inside the soil, but at the same time, they remind me of seeds, or seed hulls.

---Robyn

 

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