Marsh-Column Stalk
Marsh-Column Stalk | ||
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(Flabellaticuneus palospolus) | ||
16/109, replaced by descendant | ||
Information | ||
Creator | BioCat Other | |
Week/Generation | 16/107 | |
Habitat | Yokto Marsh | |
Size | 1.6 m Tall | |
Primary Mobility | Sessile | |
Support | Unknown | |
Diet | Photosynthesis | |
Respiration | Unknown | |
Thermoregulation | Ectotherm | |
Reproduction | Asexual, Airborne/Sinking cylindrical spores | |
Taxonomy | ||
Domain Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species | Eukaryota Melanophyta Melanoanthae Aurantilabiopsida Melanostipales Flabellaticunaceae Flabellaticuneus Flabellaticuneus palospolus |
Ancestor: | Descendants: |
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The marsh-column stalk split from its ancestor and inhabited the Yokto Marsh. Their spores which are still spread by the wind and are still kept inside a chamber placed on top of its stalk which is opened once the chamber is filled with spores. The spores can form thick orange clouds able to choke small animals like its ancestor before it, only, the tallstalk is even more numerous and the spores can choke bigger animals. As it grows inside the waters of the Marsh the spores often land inside the water. When this happens they float around for a few minutes until a water detecting mechanism kicks in releasing all the stored air inside them making them sink to the bottom of the swamp there they grow.
They have adapted to growing inside the waters and because they are always cooled by them could afford turning even more black absorbing more light. Because it now drinks water from all of its underwater parts of the stalk its roots has mainly adapted to keeping it in the ground when the drifts come and wash the swamp. Its roots adapted to growing near stones and holding on to them while it whole root has grown more into the ground.
Its main problem in the drift season is its relative the fan rootstalk. These bond together and drift during this season and by so create a massive entangled body that if hits the long stalk of the marsh-column stalk eventually root it out of the ground killing it. In order to stop this from happening during this season alone (which the plant recognize by daily movements in the water) it grows a side fan at its underwater part of the stalk that faces the stream. Using movement sensors in this fan when an object comes its way down the stream the fan starts moving back and forward making it stray to the sides of the plant. The fan shrinks and dies after this season is over.