Camurustelechos fortrutium
This cocktus has developed larger roots that allow it to grow tall enough to avoid having its seeds being sapped by its consumer, Acutognathus fellio. These roots are greater in number and are longer and wider in dimension compared to the roots in Phallucaulis semaprogandos so that they can provide extra support for the polyph. This in turn allowed it to have a wider stem which then allowed the stem to grow taller.
Phallucaulis fortrutium grows up to fifty centimeters (50cm) in height and matures three (3) months after the sapling begins to grow in the spring. The top of the stem grows sideways in a random direction to disperse tiny seeds over a long distance of up to seventy centimeters (70cm) from the parent polyph, which are released in a viscous fluid once a month on average.
Phallucaulis fortrutium can sustain itself longer off of its own nutrients in the case of a bad winter as its stem is wider and stores more cells, and it is capable of living several years. Reproduction is asexual and the polyph will slow its functions down and stop producing seeds in the winter. The stem is bent in the right way to minimize as much moisture loss as possible at this time of the year. Seeds will grow in the spring after the climate warms up and becomes more suitable for photosynthesis, and adults become more active at this time of the year too, their prime being mid-spring to late summer.