Suction Crastrum

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Suction Crastrum
(Adhesifolium adhaero)
Main image of Suction Crastrum
Species is extinct.
22/?, unknown cause
Information
CreatorBioCat Other
Week/Generation16/109
HabitatSomarinoa Coast, Yokto Coast
Size2 cm Wide
Primary MobilityUnknown
SupportUnknown
DietPhotosynthesis
RespirationPassive Diffusion
ThermoregulationEctotherm
ReproductionBudding
Taxonomy
Domain
Kingdom
Phylum
Class
Order
Family
Genus
Species
Eukaryota
Chloroasterobiota
Chloroasterophyta
Crescoasteropsida
Adhesifoliales
Adhesifoliaceae
Adhesifolium
Adhesifolium adhaero
Ancestor:Descendants:

The suction crastrum split from its ancestor and inhabited the some of the coasts of Glicker. Unlike its passively swimming ancestor it has found a new niche to live in, the faces of different crystal floras that can be found all around Somarinoa Coast and Yokto Coast. It attaches itself to its host using many small suction circles that act just like its movement and floating mechanism using the water expanding mechanism on the ring itself making it expand or shrink and suck onto whatever the suction crastrum is touching. Generally they swim around sucking to almost anything like rocks and other creatures, still in order to find their rather safe crystal hosts they release enzymes once attached to anything that detect its membrane structure and have a unique sensitivity to the crystals' membrane.

The suction crastrum might be seen as a parasite as some sort, or at least a damaging organism towards the crystals as they shade little parts of them and damage their overall light absorption. Still most of the times the suction crastrum doesn't cover more than 5%-10% of the crystal. Also they give some sort of protection for the crystal as when the crystal gets eaten all the suction crastrums on it escape in a green swarm confusing the herbivore sometimes scaring it away.

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)
  • Hallucrastrum (family Adhesifoliaceae)
  • Stalk Rastum (order Adhesifoliales)
  • Colonial Calmstrum (class Crescoasteropsida)