Small water droplets can sometimes be found on well watered grapevines early in the season. These are not insect eggs but "grape pearls" as they are called. |
Q. Early in the growing season I saw small clear droplets
on my grapevines. Would you happen to know what is the source of these
drops? I have had leafhopper issues in
the past and I was concerned they might be insect eggs.
Grapes early in the season can develop small balls of water droplets on the leaves and stems called grape pearls. They may resemble insect eggs but they are not and can be ignored. |
A. Not too many people see what you saw. We are too busy
to notice. These droplets are tiny and difficult to see. Not all kinds of
grapes seem to have them. You might see them on Concord or Thompson seedless.
Nothing to worry about but it is an interesting phenomenon.
They are
called “grape pearls” or “sap balls” and not related to insects or diseases.
However, they do look like insect or mite eggs. Leafhopper females lay their eggs inside the
leaf veins so there are no eggs of this insect to see on the underside of leaves.
These
droplets are pushed outside the leaf when the vine is full of water and
experiencing rapid new growth. They are usually found on the undersides of
leaves or on young stems. It reminds me of the water droplets pushed out of
turfgrass through hydathodes in the spring during cool weather. There is so
much water present on grass leaf blades that golf course superintendents would send
someone out with a bamboo pole to “whip the greens” and remove the “dew” on the
grass.
Don’t be concerned and ignore them. If
your grapevines are dense, shake the vines so water drops to the ground.
Otherwise they will dry normally and disappear as the daytime air gets hotter
and drier.
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