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Identify this bizarre (fungus? cocoon? something else???) on my strawberries... (Original Post) Elad Sep 2013 OP
Could be a slime mold. The Velveteen Ocelot Sep 2013 #1
When and if you do find out, pls. let us know. dixiegrrrrl Sep 2013 #2
From what I see, this doesn't seem to be hurting the plants. Curmudgeoness Sep 2013 #3
a slime mold* ..... no biggy Botany Sep 2013 #4
I have absolutely no idea what that is, but I have advice ConcernedCanuk Sep 2013 #5
Slime mold seems to fit the bill. Elad Sep 2013 #6
This message was self-deleted by its author NCarolinawoman Sep 2013 #7
I never thought of slime molds getting on green growing plants. NCarolinawoman Sep 2013 #8
it is fascinating. sounds like they are some kind of link being between plant and animal. ellenrr Oct 2013 #9
Message auto-removed Name removed Nov 2013 #10

dixiegrrrrl

(60,011 posts)
2. When and if you do find out, pls. let us know.
Sun Sep 1, 2013, 05:17 PM
Sep 2013

Looks like those puffy things may be a home to some wee insect in the inside, judging from the holes.

2nd question I would want answered is what, in the animal kingdom, would like to snack on that white stuff!

I had to take our strawberries out after armadillos kept digging up the patch.
At least they were identifiable.

Curmudgeoness

(18,219 posts)
3. From what I see, this doesn't seem to be hurting the plants.
Sun Sep 1, 2013, 05:41 PM
Sep 2013

Is that correct? At first, I thought insect cocoons, but it looks like it is just spreading along. That would not seem to be a cocoon. The first picture has me baffled....what is that in the very front? Insects? Insect legs? Or part of the plant? Since I am always so curious, I would open one of those big ones up to see what is inside, if anything. That may help answer the question of what it is. Or we can wait for someone who knows exactly what this is.

Also, next time, if possible, put a penny down to give scale to the photos. It helps sometimes to know the size.

On edit, I think that I did find this using The Velveteen Ocelot's suggestion of a slime mold. If you go to the bottom 4 or 5 photos here, you will see what appears to be the same thing (Fuligo septica):

http://waynesword.palomar.edu/slime1.htm

You can check by seeing if your problem is hard like cement, and if you can find the spores under the surface by scraping the surface as shown in these photos.

If this is what it is, you don't have to worry about it. It will do no harm. At least, that is what the link from TVO says.

Botany

(72,504 posts)
4. a slime mold* ..... no biggy
Mon Sep 2, 2013, 05:01 PM
Sep 2013

Last edited Mon Sep 2, 2013, 06:35 PM - Edit history (1)

just wash it off w/ a hose

* myxomycetes

 

ConcernedCanuk

(13,509 posts)
5. I have absolutely no idea what that is, but I have advice
Tue Sep 3, 2013, 12:13 AM
Sep 2013

.
.
.

I wouldn't touch it, or eat anything off the plants until I was certain what the growth is.

I have grown many vegetable gardens, including a greenhouse - never seen anything like that.

Advice would to be to get a number of people to actually see it, neighborhood gardeners,

a person from a florist shop, a horticulturist etc, -

it could be inert, it could be poison.

Don't take a chance.

Check it out.

CC

Elad

(11,400 posts)
6. Slime mold seems to fit the bill.
Tue Sep 3, 2013, 11:36 AM
Sep 2013

It doesn't seem to be harming the plants. It "poofed" a fine brown spore mass when I hit it with a hose. Probably going to try letting it dry out.

Response to Elad (Reply #6)

NCarolinawoman

(2,825 posts)
8. I never thought of slime molds getting on green growing plants.
Tue Sep 10, 2013, 12:12 AM
Sep 2013

The ones I have seen are always "crawling" along some kind of decaying organic matter on the ground. The most common ones that I have seen look like shiny yellow flattened scrambled eggs. Hard to notice movement except they will not be in the same place the next day.

I have been told that they have some form of "brain" and scientists have discovered that the molds can out-perform rats in figuring out mazes; with the molds moving at a slower pace ("slower pace" being quite an understatement). Sounds really bizarre, but fascinating.

Response to Elad (Original post)

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