|reproduction= Asexual (spores transfer trough the digestive tract of other animals)
|reproduction= Asexual (spores transfer trough the digestive tract of other animals)
|domain = Eukaryota
|parent = Lentescocarpaceae
|kingdom = Phoenoplastida
|phylum = Spherophyta
|class = Euspherophyta
|order = Collospherales
|family = Lentescocarpaceae
|genus = Lentescocarpus
|genus = Lentescocarpus
|species = aigialus
|species = aigialus
Line 26:
Line 22:
The '''sticky fruit''' split off from the [[stickyballs]]. It lives on the King Beach. It just photosynthesizes, but it has changed its reproduction. The ball itself is hollow, and the spores are suspended in a sweet-tasting gel. When eaten, the spores travel through the digestive tract. Not all spores survive though. This mechanism allows the sticky fruits to spread faster with this new "spore dispersal".
The '''sticky fruit''' split off from the [[stickyballs]]. It lives on the King Beach. It just photosynthesizes, but it has changed its reproduction. The ball itself is hollow, and the spores are suspended in a sweet-tasting gel. When eaten, the spores travel through the digestive tract. Not all spores survive though. This mechanism allows the sticky fruits to spread faster with this new "spore dispersal".
The sticky fruit split off from the stickyballs. It lives on the King Beach. It just photosynthesizes, but it has changed its reproduction. The ball itself is hollow, and the spores are suspended in a sweet-tasting gel. When eaten, the spores travel through the digestive tract. Not all spores survive though. This mechanism allows the sticky fruits to spread faster with this new "spore dispersal".
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)