Savanna Sticky-Rod

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Savanna Sticky-Rod
(Polymorphospherus purpureatuodia)
Main image of Savanna Sticky-Rod
Species is extinct.
9/60, replaced by descendant
Information
CreatorClayren Other
Week/Generation9/59
HabitatHuggs-Yokto Savanna
Size1-90 cm Wide
Primary MobilityUnknown
SupportUnknown
DietPhotosynthesis
RespirationUnknown
ThermoregulationUnknown
ReproductionAsexual Budding, Very Resistant Spores
Taxonomy
Domain
Genus
Species
Eukaryota
Polymorphospherus
Polymorphospherus purpureatuodia
Ancestor:Descendants:

The stickyball-crown shrub has changed yet again, this time moving out of the desert completely for the more hospitable lands of the Huggs-Yokto Savanna. While the only real change that we can see from the outside is a small change in the patches shape, many internal changes have come to pass. The rudimentary chemical communication that developed with the savanna sticky-rods ancestors has grown more complex and less reactionary. Four chemicals that mean "release sonosil" , "secrete sticky sap", "stop releasing sonosil" and "stop releasing sticky sap" can be released by each sticky-rod. Sonosil is the name that has been given to the chemical that, when released, makes the sticky-rod smell and taste quite awful to any organism that tries to eat it. By stopping the production of sticky sap, the sticky-rod can conserve energy in an emergency and eventually be moved to a new location by the weather. This is dangerous however, as drifting sticky-rods are easy pickings for herbivores and omnivores alike, and almost 60% of sticky-rod colonies die out this way. Despite these challenges, the rudimentary system of communication has made the sticky-rod quite successful.

Living Relatives (click to show/hide)

These are randomly selected, and organized from lowest to highest shared taxon. (This may correspond to similarity more than actual relation)
  • Toxiglobes (class Euspherophyta)