To be clear, the record broken is most species spread by one species. rip seashrog, beaten same gen in which it was submitted

I like the fur detail and thoroughness on its physiological changes.

With all that species-spreading, there's sure to be a floral clash.

Why do you revel in making my wiki job difficult?

Its niche is unfortunately just like that.

Where would some of these plants even go though, especially like the Tropical Gecoba Tree?

There are some that might be able to go into new biomes. There's some polar species that currently live in temperate biomes that I could see surviving in the mountains. I may revise it with specific spread lists.

These are adorable, and remind me of bumblebees mixed with sparrows.


This post has been edited by Nergali: Sep 18 2020, 05:59 PM

"It can scent using chemoreceptors the inside of its mouth and vocalize with a “toot” from its butt nostril."
You meant "smell", and "in the inside of its mouth".

I've seen the term "scent" used as a verb before.

I like how this goes into detail on their reproductive physiology, since it's vague for most plents. I think the only plent to have a diagram of exactly how it reproduces was a long-extinct ant-like pseudo-mammal.

I actually scoured through ancestors when making this, and found that plents incubated their young in throat pouches. There used to be more information on that in descriptions, it's kinda weird that it stopped being mentioned eventually. After looking over other pre-grb plents I updated the general page to note the variation I observed (from gular pouch like organs to stuff closer to the chest) for future reference.

Good to go?

oops, I forgot about this. I'll do my edit, hold on.

Okay, edits done.