|reproduction= Asexual Budding, Very Resistant Spores
|reproduction= Asexual Budding, Very Resistant Spores
|domain =
|parent = Ramospheraceae
|kingdom =
|genus = Ramospherus
|phylum =
|class =
|order =
|family =
|genus = Testudohexapodia
|species = purpurea
|species = purpurea
}}
}}
The success of its ancestor in the desert and savanna areas has been carried along to the '''Stickyball-CrownShrub'''. The Stickyball-CrownShrub gets its name from the shape that the [[Stickyballs]] form. Besides the size and larger number of Stickyballs in a patch, the Stickyball-CrownShrub has something else that sets it apart. When attacked, the Stickyball-CrownShrub releases a chemical that makes it taste very bad to most herbivores and omnivores. Besides being a defense mechanism, this chemical causes all nearby shrubs to release their own chemicals. Though not a real form of communication, these little balls show the potential to eventually do so, many mutations down the line.
The success of its ancestor in the desert and savanna areas has been carried along to the '''stickyball-crown shrub'''. The stickyball-crown shrub gets its name from the shape that the [[stickyballs]] form. Besides the size and larger number of stickyballs in a patch, the stickyball-crown shrub has something else that sets it apart. When attacked, the stickyball-crown shrub releases a chemical that makes it taste very bad to most herbivores and omnivores. Besides being a defense mechanism, this chemical causes all nearby shrubs to release their own chemicals. Though not a real form of communication, these little balls show the potential to eventually do so, many mutations down the line.
The success of its ancestor in the desert and savanna areas has been carried along to the stickyball-crown shrub. The stickyball-crown shrub gets its name from the shape that the stickyballs form. Besides the size and larger number of stickyballs in a patch, the stickyball-crown shrub has something else that sets it apart. When attacked, the stickyball-crown shrub releases a chemical that makes it taste very bad to most herbivores and omnivores. Besides being a defense mechanism, this chemical causes all nearby shrubs to release their own chemicals. Though not a real form of communication, these little balls show the potential to eventually do so, many mutations down the line.
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)