Sorry for the absence, I could come up with all sorts of excuses, but I won't. I just was lazy as hell. I'm sorry.
There are many diseases caused by Prokaryotes! Food poisoning, Malaria! Typhoid!
Hmm. Is there a posion sphere? I think it would fit with mah charecter. Strength, and what takes it away.
Good to know that prokaryotes can cause diseases aswell! I just wasn't sure if just the simple structure of them is enough to have an impact on higher organisms. The spheres can overlap, just don't be too similar to others.
With the aggration of cells Eukayotes into tighter clusters, cells in the center of the group find a use supplying suplementary proteins while those closer to the edge form a mucous that loosely binds them together and those few layers on the edge specialize more in feeding/uptake mechanisms. The result is an immobile amorpheous drifting colony of semispecialized cells that finds strength in numbers and specialization.
edit: One problem colonies have is that there are too many of them together. They can comsume all their food (and starve) or even suffocate the cells in the center by denying them a healthy environment.
You get some more specialized colonies! Nice! Also, those cells live in symbiosis for a reason. I doubt that they would evolve into such a form if some parts of the colonies just died.
The poripinnans are my sponge-kinda-like organisms; I used the name a while back and mentioned it was my official name for them. Understandable that you forgot, though.
Diseases can be prokaryotic. See: Bacteria.
Anyways...
Some of the smaller poripinnans will grow smaller and begin to lodge themselves parasitically in the pores of larger filter-feeding creatures, such as Zanzetukhan's. They will filter out food which would have been pumped into the larger organism.
Meanwhile, some of the deep-sea poripinnans (I thought the poripinnans were monophyletic?) will develop a type of cell which takes note of the chemicals being pumped through the water, as well as cells which form a better intercell communication pathway. In short, a primitive nose and very primitive nerves. Call these new creatures rhinasusans.
Finally, because those primordial-soup prokaryotes haven't been getting much love lately, some of the eukaryotic creatures of the aforementioned lineage will absorb some of the related poisonous ones, causing the latter to become poison-producing organelles.
Oh, alright then, sorry that I forgot, I just probably wasn't paying attention at th time... Ayway, you create the first parasitic organisms! And also the first nerve-like system, very primitive for now, of course. (And relatively useless for now). The surface sponges, living in shallow water branched off of the poripinnans quite a while ago, if that's what you were wondering about. Also,some of the poisonous prokaryotes develop into organelles!
Meanwhile, some of the deep-sea poripinnans[/b] (I thought the poripinnans were monophyletic?) will develop a type of cell which takes note of the chemicals being pumped through the water, as well as cells which form a better intercell communication pathway. In short, a primitive nose and very primitive nerves. Call these new creatures rhinasusans.
At the size the actual organism are, specialized cells for communication are not really useful. Increasing the general cellular communication would be enough.
Finally, because those primordial-soup prokaryotes haven't been getting much love lately, some of the eukaryotic creatures of the aforementioned lineage will absorb some of the related poisonous ones, causing the latter to become poison-producing organelles.
Now this is new. Nowhere on earth there is "poisonous organelles". Poison is usually produced the same way as regular proteins. That would be a secondary, specialized protein "factory", something truly alien. It is perhaps less efficient than the regular way, though.
Good to have biology student here, just sayin'. At least that's what your title says... Anyways...
The proto-nerves might not be very useful for now, but there may have been some evolutionary motivations for such a course of development. Also, it might help in the future.
And I also like how this is turning out. The first truly non-Earth-like thing we have here!
Some of the predator cells start to clump together, making colonies. These colonies have thre types of cells.
1 : Move cells = They're the "motors" of the colonies, having many flagellas.
2 : Link cells = These cells are tunnels and connections to the move cells and the breeder cells
3 : Breeder cells = These cells are the only cells in the colony capable of mitosis. They produce link cells and move cells, as well daughter blobs, which mature inside the mother colony.
The fate of every colony is to die eventually, because the daughter colony rupture the mother colony.
Usually, these colonies have 50-100 cells. They form a ball, but only the surface are cells. The innard is filled with jelly, in which the daughter colonies mature.
They're prone to viral infections.
You develop new cell colonies!
I had imagined the poripinnans as being at least a millimeter or so...um, GM, can we get an update on sizes?
Well, they vary in size... They could be from a millimeter, to the size of modern sponges. The term porripinnan is used for the bwhole group of the organisms.
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 CO2 right now! You'll have to use a simpler version of the organism.
I have to ask, without the primitive version of the heart, how is the organism sending the nutrients to the cells far away from the stomach? I had placed in the primitive version of the heart (only has a single chamber) there to cause pressure fluctuations to send the nutrients to the rest of the body, but since it is not there, what is sending along the nutrients?
Nevermind, bacteria evolved for that purpose (aka. smaller) would be the better solution to the problem at the current time. Could also have another kind in the stomach as well.
Was going to post this to help in the decision of what would be needed instead of a heart, but I thought of the solution above. It took so long to make, and I am not going to delete it.
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II=flaps that open and close
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#=1 cell (dividers between two open areas mean that the open space curves to another part of the organism.)
open space=passageway for water
Actions
>Promote population increase in the Yisfjlelh species.
>Promote cell specialization in the Yisfjlelh species.
>Promote symbiosis between macrophages and Yisfjlelh species
Because of the small size, the nutrients can be brought to the areas where they are needed just through osmosis. It;s no problem for small organisms. Also, you create your new species and achieve symbiosis with cells that help them digest stuff.
Indeed.
Granted, we have no idea how long each turn is...and it would be REALLY boring to direct the growth of different kinds of microbes for a hundred turns or whatever before getting to the rest, then having entire civilizations fall in under a turn.
Turns will slow down by then. I really should specify how long they are...
There is one source of materials that each and every one of us has overlooked when providing benefits to these growing species.
Lord Draken reaches into the cells that comprise himself and from them pulls their DNA coding to survive in oxygen rich environments and grants each of the races this resisitance to the gas as he starts to turn the Sulfur Dioxide into Ozone and removes the sulfur to Tranquality where he stores the sulfur in a solid mass.
*Draken's DNA grants increase oxygen resistance to all currently alive races*
you separate