Planet: Genesis
Mass: 0.95 Earth masses
Diameter: 11858 km
SMA: 2.4 AU
Atmosphere: Nitrogen (87%), Carbon Dioxide (9%), Oxygen (3%), Other gases (Argon, water vapor etc.) (0.8%), Sulfur dioxide (0.2%), 1.0 ATM
Axis: 28°
Water covering: 60% of the surface, quite unstable climate
Geology: Active, Earth-like
Moons:
Tranquility:
Mass: 0.012 Earth masses
Diameter: 3446 km
SMA: 403 000 km
Orbital inclination: 28°
Atmosphere: None
Geology: Dead
Ignisterra:
Mass: 0.007 Earth masses
Diameter: 3177 km
SMA: 151 000 km
Orbital inclination: 87°
Atmosphere: None
Geology: Volatile, Io-like
1. Fiddle with organisms to give them greater oxygen resistance.
2. A few of the poripinnans will develop specialized tissues.
Many organisms develop tolerance of oxygen, otherwise they would die. Although population-wise this would have been quite a change. Most of the anaerobic organisms have been wiped out at first, but they found enclaves where they could survive. Anyway, besides the obvious changes which happened on Earth aswell, the sponges (I presume that's what you meant with that word, cause not even Google could tell me what it means
) develop some specialized tissues, at first for filtering out nutrients and gill-like structures for getting the CO
2 into their bodies (for those who didn't know, the sponges from the deep use CO
2 instead of oxygen on this planet).
The prehistoric oceans were very acidic. The acidity will go down as Carbon levels drop.
However, in order to get a decent athmosphere, and have our creatures do anything usefull at all, we need Co2 to be at least 20%. Most of that is currently hiding in the sea or rocks, So I shall scare it into the air.
> More Volcanism
The Earth tremored, and deep in the oceans black smokers spewed acidic, black smoke. The oxygen molecules hadn't reached this deep into the ocean yet, at least not in large quantities. However, it wouldn't be long. As the Carbon levels began to stagnate and drop, and volcanic ash clouded the sun, the temperature began to fall. Ice crept over the land and sea, sealing of the organisms in giant underground lakes. Caves collapsed, locking up even more, shielding them from change.
As more and more water become locked up in the ice, sea levels might start to drop. On top of that, the increased albedo might lower temperatures even further.
You cause quite a climate change! Although a very brief one. Once the ash sets, it quickly gets back to normal, because of the high amount of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. Although brief, the climate change provides some permanent protection for your deep sea creatures from the filthy poison that is oxygen.
Dormant multi-cellular DNA?
I meant the ability to specialize the way true mulch-cellular organisms can. It would be more proto-DNA (double helix of RNA, which should exist at this time)
Actions
>Manipulate an organism to float, through the usage of gas-filled cavities that deflate and inflate, on water currents (for now). The gas cavities work on the same principle as a submarine, pulling the gas into the upper chambers and filling the bladders with water to sink and expelling the water by pumping the gas into the chambers.
>Manipulate some macrophages to breakdown the cells within the water, but not the cells of the organism that holds them, into digestible materials. Have them able to attach to the inside of the stomach.
Cross-section of organism (shape repeats for 360o)
#############
### #### ####
### ######4####### ####
# 2 # # # # 2 #
# # # # # #
# # 1 # #
3 # # 3
# #
# #
1) Stomach that takes in water from the bottom (closes).
2) Gas cavities
3) Flap that opens to allow water into and out of the cavities. Cells around expel used water to outside.
4) Primitive heart.
Throughout most of the organism each # equals this:
## ##
## ##
## ##
## ##
## ##
Along the gas bladders it is (when the gas is on the right):
## #
## #
## #
## #
## #
This organism reproduces through spores.
This time, I have to agree with the others. This is WAY too complex compared to the most complex things we have now: sponges with a few specialized tissues. The floating on gas is alright, the mobile sponge-like creatures descended from the deep sea organisms could develop bubbles of gas to float on water currents. Although the stomach is way beyond what is possible right now. The most advanced creatures have only separated chambers for filtering food and CO
2 right now! You'll have to use a simpler version of the organism.
Oh boy this looks cool. And Sciency.
Illemine, Goddess of Parasitism and Strength. Unless those are taken.
So what are we arguing about?
Welcome aboard! No problem if the spheres overlap, if they aren't too similar to gods that are already here.
Actually, aside from the (useless at this size) circulatory system and the overly-complicated symbiotic stomach, this organism is primitive enough to give it a go.
Say it evolve from the sponges, has no heart or whatever because it's small enough to not need it, and the "stomach" work with its own cells.
This could work. The "stomach" digestion area seems alright, the circulatory system is useless and too complicated for now anyway and the reproduction is entirely plausible. Many organisms today first... hatch? Is that the correct word for this case?... to be an immobile larva and when they grow up they are mobile. Jellyfish! So, Zanzetkuken, what are you gonna call it? Not as easy to sun up with only a few words as the organisms till now were.
And the viruses, but those seem fairly self-explanaotory.
Now, Poisonous organisms tend to be quite common, and are the primary cause of several diseases. This is because it is not the micro-organism itself that is deadly, but the poison it produces in great quantities and it's otherwise hard-to-noticenesss and relatively benign nature. the creatures then feast on the decaying matter.
If Zanzetkuken makes his organism, fashion a prokaryote to produce a chemical toxic to it. Poison works by undermining integrity of tissue wall between stomach and heart. Then eat it when it dies.
Competition! Great! Both sides will benefit from this!... Well, in the long run they will. Are you sure that you want your disease to be prokaryotic? Not sure if that's even possible... I think yes, but I'm not sure.