It was pay day yesterday, so naturally today I found myself at the big green shed. I told myself it was only for irrigation supplies and a bag of perlite, but, well, we all know how it goes.
I ended up with 6 little seedlings of species I'm interested in. They were all growing roots out the bottom of their seedling pots, and today's a lovely wet day for repotting, so I gently moved them from their tiny pots to a 10cm grow pot for the summer.
On two of the trees/sticks there are these very fine meshed pot type things surrounding the original root ball. The rest just had a build up of peat, which is what I assume they propogated them in. For the Cotoneaster and melaleuca thymifolia however there are these tiny pot type things completely surrounding the inner football of the plant. The texture I can best compare it to is fishing line. Like someone crocheted a plant pot out of fishing line.



I know we've got some nursery growers, and professional growers here, I was wondering if anyone might know what these are. And most importantly are they biodegradable like the peat/cardboard pots sometimes used for starters, or do I need to try and figure out how to remove these from the roots without killing the plant somehow?
They were cheap seedlings. I bought them mostly out of curiosity for developing my own starter trees and getting the hang of techniques on trees I'm less invested in than my older ones ( I'm definitely challenged in the ability to 'not f*** with it, like many beginners

Any knowledge, wisdom, advice, or help welcomed
