There was no doubt. The next step had been taken by other organisms in the water, and now it was time for his creations to do so. Coöperation between the cells. he knew exactly what he wanted and made it so. His new altered cells would split, but still stick together forming a bigger organism. Not completely separated, they would be able to share nutritiënts.
But he wasn't done yet. The spike-cells couldn't just grow endlessly, just to become an enormous mass. That way they wouldn't be able to survive. they needed to feed. to hunt. to move. They needed all the energy they could get, not just to survive. But to become the best at doing so. Their size needed to be optimal. And so needed to be their form.
The Ambitious One tried many shapes and sizes. And found that the spikes he gave his cells, at this stage, prevented any cellular connections other than to the side or the back. So he connected four cells together back to back, in the way that with their spikes, the cells would form an X. With just enough space for another singular cell to go through the middle. Then he stacked the X's. making a chain. A hollow and flexible tube, with most spikes pointing outward, except for the ones at the back that would point inward and the ones on the front that would point forward. And it would grow longer as the cells duplicated themselves. At a length of ten X's, it would split in the middle to create two new ones.
It didn't do much yet, but water would go through it, and any nutriënts the water might carry, would be caught within the tube. The same for singular cells, with the bonus that they would be ripped open on the front by the spikes.
The Ambitious one was very aware of the risk he took with his overcomplex creature, and realised that his ambition could be his downfall. But he had spend a lot of time experimenting, and he knew he couldn't fall behind. Time was a most important factor.
He watched his new creations randomly wiggle through the water, as the individual cells' movement influenced the position of all the others in the organism, and already a new idea came to his mind.
But he wasn't done yet. The spike-cells couldn't just grow endlessly, just to become an enormous mass. That way they wouldn't be able to survive. they needed to feed. to hunt. to move. They needed all the energy they could get, not just to survive. But to become the best at doing so. Their size needed to be optimal. And so needed to be their form.
The Ambitious One tried many shapes and sizes. And found that the spikes he gave his cells, at this stage, prevented any cellular connections other than to the side or the back. So he connected four cells together back to back, in the way that with their spikes, the cells would form an X. With just enough space for another singular cell to go through the middle. Then he stacked the X's. making a chain. A hollow and flexible tube, with most spikes pointing outward, except for the ones at the back that would point inward and the ones on the front that would point forward. And it would grow longer as the cells duplicated themselves. At a length of ten X's, it would split in the middle to create two new ones.
It didn't do much yet, but water would go through it, and any nutriënts the water might carry, would be caught within the tube. The same for singular cells, with the bonus that they would be ripped open on the front by the spikes.
The Ambitious one was very aware of the risk he took with his overcomplex creature, and realised that his ambition could be his downfall. But he had spend a lot of time experimenting, and he knew he couldn't fall behind. Time was a most important factor.
He watched his new creations randomly wiggle through the water, as the individual cells' movement influenced the position of all the others in the organism, and already a new idea came to his mind.