Libraphotocyanus cytosol

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Libraphotocyanus cytosol is a photosynthetic unicellular eukaryotic organism found growing near the surface of Zone 25, where sunlight is abundant. It contains chloroplasts within the cell membrane that photosynthesize and convert carbon dioxide into oxygen, and is believed to have shared a distant common ancestor with the polyps on Oefsy some 750 million years before the gamma burst.

Libraphotocyanus cytosol grows to be approximately 50 micrometers in length and reproduces asexually by performing mitosis every 30 minutes and creating two identical copies of itself.

Libraphotocyanus cytosol absorbs materials for growth through simple diffusion through a semipermeable cell membrane. If a cell undergoes a period without sunlight (such as nighttime) and is not able to gain enough energy to function normally, the cell will slow down its functions in a state of dormancy and will resume its typical growth once the cell comes across a favorable amount of sunlight.