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I'm not sure I saw eggs in any of the pictures other than the one of the single egg taken by hannakat. This may in part be due to the pics and my screen, these tiny things are really tough to photograph. However, I can tell you that arthropod eggs are amazingly uniform in shape and size within a given species, with very little variability in any measure. They will also be elliptical shaped like hannakat's egg. Even if we took and examined eggs from all the members on this thread with their different rearing techniques, they'd all be quite uniform. Having said all that, I'm not sure how important recognizing the eggs is to raising mealworms--although being able to recognize eggs is cool! (if I'm missing something that pertains to what you're doing, let me know). For a period of time I worried about egg loss when I removed old dried vegetable matter or when I removed the bottom layer of substrate, so I put the removed material in a bucket and watched and waited to see how many grew from it. It turned out that so few were produced that I stopped bothering with it. A single beetle could lay ever so much more than emerged from the waste so it made more sense to me to focus on the well being of the colony rather than on stragglers that I missed.