Recipe

There is an artificial lake in our village. While walking past it, I noticed these strange crater-like holes in the water, each containing what looked like eggs. I stood by the lake for quite a while, watching them and trying to figure out what animal they might belong to, but I couldn’t come up with an answer. Does anyone know whose eggs these are

What you’re describing—crater-like holes in the shallow water with “eggs” inside—sounds much more like a fish spawning site than a bird or amphibian nest.

In artificial lakes (especially in South Asia), the most common explanation is:


Most likely cause: fish nesting / spawning pits

Species like tilapia or carp-like fish often create small circular depressions in the lakebed.

What’s happening:

  • Male fish dig a round “crater” in the mud or sand
  • They clean and guard it as a breeding territory
  • The female lays eggs there (or nearby), and the male protects them

These look like:

  • Small “bowls” or “dents” in the lake floor
  • Sometimes multiple pits close together

The “eggs” you thought you saw are usually:

  • Tiny clusters stuck to the bottom or hidden in sediment
  • Not large visible eggs floating freely

A common species involved in village ponds and artificial lakes is:

  • Nile tilapia

Another possible cause (less common)

Some carp species also make shallow spawning depressions in warm, still water:

  • They disturb the bottom sediment
  • Eggs are laid in vegetation or gravel, not usually visible as “open eggs in holes”

What it is NOT likely to be

  • ❌ Frog/toad eggs (they float in jelly-like clusters, not craters)
  • ❌ Bird eggs (no birds nest in water like that)
  • ❌ Insect eggs (not visible as crater structures)

Quick way to confirm

If you go back and observe:

  • Fish staying close to the holes → very likely spawning behavior
  • Multiple circular pits in shallow warm areas → classic fish nesting
  • Sudden movement of small fish guarding spots → confirmation

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