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Is this some sort of egg sack I found at the beach in Topsail, NC? (Original Post) Buttoneer Mar 26 OP
What in the... 2naSalit Mar 26 #1
Nature's Art ZDU Mar 26 #2
This is what Google says: LuckyCharms Mar 26 #3
Looks like some type of rhizome with dried up roots. sinkingfeeling Mar 26 #4
I think that is the rhizome of a sea oat. HappyH Mar 26 #5
It IS an alien... Rizen Mar 26 #6
I agree - a hairy one. Marie Marie Mar 26 #7
''Root found on Ocracoke beach'' Donkees Friday #8

2naSalit

(102,832 posts)
1. What in the...
Thu Mar 26, 2026, 09:01 PM
Mar 26

Is it organic?

What I find amusing is the bird tracks, looks like they weren't sure and decided it was a leave 'erite.*


* leave 'erite = leave 'eritethere.

ZDU

(1,267 posts)
2. Nature's Art
Thu Mar 26, 2026, 09:03 PM
Mar 26

My guess is that it's bulbous root stock of a flora nature (i.e., not fauna)

LuckyCharms

(22,663 posts)
3. This is what Google says:
Thu Mar 26, 2026, 09:37 PM
Mar 26

This item appears to be an old shell that has been engulfed in coral and sea whip.

Subject: Marine detritus, specifically a dead shell covered in sea life.

Appearance: It features a woody, root-like appearance with thin, black, branch-like growths.

Origin: These are typically washed up on beaches after storms or high tides.

HappyH

(240 posts)
5. I think that is the rhizome of a sea oat.
Thu Mar 26, 2026, 10:19 PM
Mar 26

We could find those on the Gulf Coast, especially after a big storm.

Donkees

(33,714 posts)
8. ''Root found on Ocracoke beach''
Fri Mar 27, 2026, 03:55 AM
Friday

Root found on Ocracoke beach. Photo by Lisa Day Eiland

The Observer’s native plant expert, Ken Moore who lives in the Chapel Hill area, offers this observation:

That root is the thick tuberous root stem of Smilax probably Smilax laurifolia or Smilax bonanox, two of several that grow out on the dunes and in the maritime forest. This green vine, some with evergreen leaves, literally tie the shrubby vegetation together and must help greatly in securing the sandy shore against the sea wash and winds. The common name is catbrier. Plants can go by several names, including dune greenbrier and earlobe greenbrier. I find these hard-as-wood roots just about every time I walk out around Springer’s Point and quite often see them washed up in the surf on the open beach.

Ken Moore managed the North Carolina Botanical Garden from 1970 until his retirement as Assistant Director in 2003. He continues to teach plant identification classes and lead occasional field trips for the Garden. He wrote a weekly column, “Flora” for The Carrboro Citizen during its publication March 2007 – October 2012.

https://ocracokeobserver.com/2015/02/25/ask-the-observer-found-on-the-beach-feb-14-2015/
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