Malakommalis

This amorphous creature appeared from the Crystal Root spores, that had started to develop the capacity to adhere and to grow in the interior of the gastric socket of aquatic animals, becoming a parasite. A time that the spores remain in suspension in the water, they can easily be ingested by the animals, mainly if these have a diet based on the food suction of the water. When in the interior of the animal, the spores start to develop small colonies in the walls of the stomach, growing larger by budding.

Animals with softer corporal structures are more vulnerable to the development of Malakommalis, a time that to grow it sucks the water and the nutrients from the animal host's cells, making the walls of these cells become rigid due to the accumulation of minerals. When the cells are very rigid the parasite can't develop and searches new cells, coming close to the external surface of the animal. When it reaches the skin it retakes the contact with the sea's water, producing diverse yellow spores, that are set free and carryed by the water. After the spores' release, Malakommalis cells die.

The growth in the interior of the host isn't uniform and, for this reason, diverse spots can appear over its body decurrent of the presence of spores or deceased cells of Malakommalis. If the host is very small, it can die easily, a time that its cells lose the functionality and its body hardens, making it sinks, remaining on the sea bottom as an animal rock.