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Bullet-Magnet — Phytococcus

Published: 2007-03-07 23:31:10 +0000 UTC; Views: 1509; Favourites: 12; Downloads: 45
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Description Phytococcus sp. This genus of photosynthetic prokaryotes is of the same family that emerged in the Aetherian Eon and has survived for the past two billion years. It is Phytococcus, or similar prokaryote, that is absorbed into the eukaryotic cell and genome and becomes chloroplasts. They take the form of planktonic cells, drifting near the ocean's surface where they reside. Species include P. aureus, P. dirki and P. protoplastus, but without techniques such as genetic sequencing and electrophoresis they are all but impossible to differentiate.

Part of the Icarus Project . I felt that since we currently have only a few eukaryotic organisms so far, the Promethian biosphere is lacking somewhat. We began with nucleated cells, but bacteria and other prokaryotes are an important part of the ecosystem, so I made these photosynthetic organisms to be one of the producing species.

Produced on Adobe Photoshop CS2
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Comments: 13

Pen1tence [2010-12-18 22:12:58 +0000 UTC]

Wow, are there examples of phytococcus in real life?

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Bullet-Magnet In reply to Pen1tence [2010-12-18 23:27:24 +0000 UTC]

No, it is an entirely fictional organism. But it is based on real organisms that may or may not resemble these. Photosynthetic prokaryotes are very common in the ocean. Though I was surprised to find, upon a quick Google search just now, Prochlorococcus and Synechococcus which are almost exactly the same.

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Pen1tence In reply to Bullet-Magnet [2010-12-19 09:30:22 +0000 UTC]

Ahh, interesting thank you.

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Chromattix [2009-10-19 13:25:09 +0000 UTC]

Not bad, I was also reminde dof planets for a second, it's amazing how something tiny can resemble something huge at times. Their surfaces look very good, like they were done in 3D

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Sacred-Repression [2007-03-26 19:55:48 +0000 UTC]

I absolutely love it! The rays of light and green being my fav color. Amazed at how you did this.

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weloveyouGantu [2007-03-14 23:08:44 +0000 UTC]

I deeply agree with all those who commented here.

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LoneRider [2007-03-11 07:40:41 +0000 UTC]

BACTERIAS!!! YAY!!!

Nice work on this. I like the green and texture of the membranes.

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Zerox-the-Psychic [2007-03-09 13:39:51 +0000 UTC]

Nice. yay. Etc.

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Syethain [2007-03-08 10:25:56 +0000 UTC]

you never stop amazing me. Look at that green surface!

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Bullet-Magnet In reply to Syethain [2007-03-08 12:43:51 +0000 UTC]

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ScotlandTom [2007-03-08 06:11:25 +0000 UTC]

Another technique I hope you can let me in on is how you're doing those rays of light. That and those cell nuclei of yours.

Great work. I really like how you're showing the surface water.

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Bullet-Magnet In reply to ScotlandTom [2007-03-08 12:43:27 +0000 UTC]

The rays of light were made by rendering Clouds, then Difference Clouds using the same colours, of which I set the fade to "overlay", then added a motion blur. Though I haven't quite managed to achieve such a good effect for a second time.

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coldex [2007-03-08 00:08:46 +0000 UTC]

cool

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