Stickyball-Crown Shrub: Difference between revisions
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The success of its ancestor in the desert and savanna areas has been carried along to the '''
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Revision as of 03:40, 4 December 2007
Stickyball-Crown Shrub | ||
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(Testudohexapodia purpurea) | ||
9/?, unknown cause | ||
Information | ||
Creator | Clayren Other | |
Week/Generation | 9/57 | |
Habitat | Huggs-Yokto Savanna | |
Size | 1 cm Wide individuals up to 110 cm Wide in colonies | |
Primary Mobility | Unknown | |
Support | Unknown | |
Diet | Photosynthesis | |
Respiration | Unknown | |
Thermoregulation | Unknown | |
Reproduction | Asexual Budding, Very Resistant Spores | |
Taxonomy | ||
Domain Genus Species | Eukaryota Testudohexapodia Testudohexapodia purpurea |
Ancestor: | Descendants: |
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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.