Islandball Gillfin

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Islandball Gillfin
(Erpinaleta insularphytus)
Main image of Islandball Gillfin
Species is extant.
Information
CreatorBardic Other
Week/Generation23/147
HabitatJujubee Temperate Ocean (Sunlight Zone), North Jujubee Polar Ocean (Sunlight Zone), South Jujubee Polar Ocean (Sunlight Zone), Nergali Polar Coast, Oz Temperate Coast, Wolfgang Temperate Coast, Scifi Polar Shallows, Arctic Polar Sea, Raq Temperate Bay, Colddigger Polar Bay, Elerd Temperate Coast, Darkov Temperate Coast, Bumpy Polar Coast, Anguan Temperate Coast, Blitz Polar Coast, Cola Polar Shallows, North LadyM Polar Ocean (Sunlight Zone), LadyM Temperate Ocean (Sunlight Zone), Wind Polar Sea, Dass-Clarke Temperate Sea, Ramul Temperate Coast, Artir Polar Coast
Size25 cm Long
Primary MobilityUnknown
SupportUnknown
DietHerbivore (Island Colonialball)
RespirationSemi-Active (Ram Gill)
ThermoregulationEctotherm
ReproductionSexual, Two Sexes, Sticky-Eggs on the Tails of Both Sexes or on Colonialballs
Taxonomy
Domain
Kingdom
Subkingdom
Phylum
Class
Order
Family
Genus
Species
Eukaryota
Binucleozoa
Symbiovermes (info)
Pterigiophora (info)
Rostroichthyes
Dorsibranchia (info)
Erpinaletidae
Erpinaleta
Erpinaleta insularphytus
Ancestor:Descendants:

The islandball gillfin split from its ancestor, the blue gillfin, with the evolution of the island colonialball. With the hospitable habitat provided by the false 'islands,' the gillfins soon adapted to coexist with them. They live their lives among the colonialballs, using them for shelter from weather or as defence. They burrow their way into the colonialballs or dart in and out of their dense root systems. Their eggs are even laid on colonialballs. They have adopted the colonialballs' coloration and gotten smaller to better hide amongst the 'islands.'

They have developed an interesting behaviour: when young gillfins mature into adults, the males and females mate, then tear off several colonialballs from the main mass and take them out to an area with few islands and enough nutrients to sustain the growth of one. They then lay their eggs on the colonialballs and go back to their original colony, leaving the torn-off colonialballs to bud into a new island for their young. After this, they mate once a year, and raise their young with them to sustain the original colony. This behaviour has prompted the spread of both islandball gillfins and island colonialballs, but their numbers are still held in check by the amount of nutrients available in the water.