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A "white egg" hangs on the bathroom door... He flushed it away and then came out in seconds.

Have you ever seen such a scene at home? A netizen recently posted a photo on the "Explosive Intellectualist". He said that he recently found a large group of "white eggs" on the outside of his bathroom door, which looked a bit like bubbles. The weird thing is that when he washed away the egg, it didn't take long for it to reappear again. It seemed that he couldn't remove it no matter how to wash it or how to clean it. It made him quite confused and couldn't help but ask the post asking "Is there any Does anyone know what this is?"

The original PO mentioned in a post that when he found a mass of egg on the bathroom door, he immediately washed it away with water. However, after a while, the egg appeared again, as if he couldn't get rid of it. It made him quite a headache. He originally thought it might be "termite eggs," but after asking the deworming company, the other party gave him a negative answer. Feeling helpless, he had to post to the netizen for help: "Is this mold? Or what? How should I deal with it?"

Netizens left messages and put forward their own assumptions, trying to help the original PO, "The filling in the door?", "It looks like the door is cracked~ Could it be because of squeezing and then appear again?", "The bathroom door should It’s made of wood.https://www.call-sifu.com.tw/nservice5f560185d52d0.htm, Replacing the door should solve the problem", "Blowing agent?", "The egg looks like a snail, except for the white color."

Some people analyzed it carefully, "It is recommended that you change the door version. This is caused by local blistering. There may be three reasons. The first is uneven glue spraying, resulting in a small amount of local glue, which reduces the bonding strength; the second is The problem of PVC film, PVC film contains plasticizer, in the case of aging or heating, the plasticizer is easy to migrate to the surface, affecting the bonding strength; the third is the problem of the heating tube in the blister machine, causing temperature Uneven."

However, some netizens searched with "wooden door, damp" as keywords, and the result jumped out a non-parasitic Plasmodium slime mold called "Brefeldia maxima". It is a species that is particularly common in North America and Europe, and usually appears on tree bark after heavy rain or excessive watering. This species looks very similar to the "egg" posted by the original PO, and the original PO can't help but exclaim, "I think this is the most similar! I can't find it."

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