Virulus phagohemolaimus

From OurFoodChain
Revision as of 23:48, 10 May 2020 by Ourfoodchain-bot (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{BotGenerated}} {{Infobox_Species |image=File:virulus_phagohemolaimus.png |Creator=D̜͙̟͉ìn̨̹o̬̗C̼̮̣͡óaͅt͜ |Status=Extant |Common Name= |Habitat=3, F, H...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Virulus phagohemolaimus is very similar to its ancestor Virulus phagocarnosaeclum. It looks and behaves nearly identically to Virulus phagocarnosaeclum, but it lives in different organs in a separate group of hosts. It is present in the mouth and throat of valkrasaurs, and it keeps the populations of Wyvern Plague in check. This began when an infected Mosey Whalevern (Rostrocerovenator vagarium) inhaled some Virulus phagocarnosaeclum while feeding from a Placviscoslontus flotensis carcass. The Mosey Whalevern is currently its first host.

Virulus phagohemolaimus is two-and-a-half micrometers (2.5 μm) in length and it has pilli one-and-a-half micrometers (1.5 μm) in length. It feeds on Wyvern Plague by hanging on the walls of the mouth and throat using its flagella protrusions and killing Wyvern Plague with injecting its antibiotic with its pilli, swimming and "waving" through the liquefied remains. The pores that closed to prevent saltwater from coming in are now closed at almost all times to prevent desiccation because they live in areas with more exposure to air. They open the pores to let liquefied remains in. They still close while in saltwater which helps the spread of Virulus phagohemolaimus when it is outside a wyvern body.

Virulus phagohemolaimus reproduces every twenty minutes (20 min). It takes around forty-five minutes (45 min) for a Virulus phagohemolaimus to fully mature.