Sailyp

The sailyp has split from the stickyballs in Huggs Island. Over many generations, they developed a sail-like structure that aids in photosynthesis. It also developed a skeleton similar to that of polyps, and it roots them into the ground. A small appendage sucks nutrients out of a soil. It no longer sticks to stuff,.

The sailyp no longer buds to reproduce, so it now reproduces entirely by spores. It fills the ecological niche of grass on the Huggs Island.