Cave Diaminet
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Cave Diaminet | ||
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(Retiadamas atrumunda) | ||
Information | ||
Creator | Clarke Other | |
Week/Generation | 20/130 | |
Habitat | Blood Lava Tube Sea Caves, Barlowe Water Table, Dixon Water Table, Martyk Sandstone Sea Caves | |
Size | 15 cm Wide | |
Primary Mobility | Sessile | |
Support | Unknown | |
Diet | Omnivore (Floating Stickyball, Water Table Foi, Lithoamoeba, Micro Fort, Tomokanoti, Stalkfort, Sifterfort, Iron Colony, Cave Ferrumtime, Sulfamoeba, Methamoeba), Detritivore | |
Respiration | Passive (Lenticels) | |
Thermoregulation | Ectotherm | |
Reproduction | Asexual, Self-Fertilizing Waterborne Spores | |
Taxonomy | ||
Domain Kingdom Subkingdom Division Class Subclass Order Family Genus Species | Eukaryota Binucleozoa Crystallozoa (info) Navicrystalita Adamantopsida Adamantidae Adamantales Retiadamantaceae Retiadamas Retiadamas atrumunda |
Ancestor: | Descendants: |
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The cave diaminet has split from its ancestor, the symbioship diaminet, and has moved to the Glicker water tables and sea caves. It will now cling onto the cave walls, filtering microbes as well as catching small flora and fauna out of the water and off the rock with its red fungi parts. The diaminets are connected together in single-file rows, instead of its ancestor's nets. It produces strong enzymes that excrete from the red fungi-like roots and will dissolve anything that gets caught in them. Due it living under the water all the time its spores are now released into the water rather than into the air.