Gaiad: Chapter 40

Capricórnio 12 · Day of Year 40

While Molluscs were growing strong And singing their success song, We must not forget the foundation Of Mithra's great creation. First Amaterasu's light Blesses us both day and night. A millionth reaches Terra's seas To feed life's mysteries. And so the daughters of Bacta Farm with light most attracta. First among them, daughters all Of Saya answer light's call. The Blue Green Algae spread Like living ocean's bread. They farm the sunlight bright From dawn until twilight. The sons of Viros take Their share for hunger's sake. From daughters of Saya they steal To make their viral meal. And so the viruses were The predators that were While daughters of Saya became The prey in this deadly game. By viruses came new Connections strange and true. A link that none had seen In life's ancestral scene. The daughters of Pelagia, Those sisters whose sagia Benevolence would show To all who live below, The mitochondria's kin Ate remnants thick and thin Of Cyanobacteria. Their numbers would hysteria Create beyond conceiving— So many past believing Their multitudes would grow In waters high and low. And then there were of old Purple farmers, brave and bold, Who came before Saya's line With photosynthesis fine. Roseobella, daughter great Of Elah's loving state Of lesbian motherhood, Among purple farmers stood As planimal of the sea Living wild and free. She continues to this day Her photosynthetic way. Among these bacteria small And viruses and all The detritus that fell, All were consumed well By great crown-tails so fine, The Choanoflagellates' line— Our closest cousins true In waters deep and blue. Alongside sons of Choanos Lived the tiny golden rados: Golden Algae bright and fair Floating everywhere. The sons of Dinoflagellus Saw prosperity's telltale thus Of Chrysalgos and Choanos, So they ate both, not manos. And photosynthesized too To get more energy through. They gained more power each day In their prosperous way. In their prosperity Their numbers grew, and see— The water glowed so bright In their phototrophic sight. Their rituals lit the sea With bioluminescence free. The ocean sparkled wide With their phosphorescent pride. But soon they grew corrupt, Their morals were abrupt. The sons of Dinoflagellus Turned to ways rebellious. To cannibalism they turned, While the water burned Red with carnage from their feast— They became a bloody beast. The blood poisoned all That answered nature's call. Whatever it would touch Would suffer very much. And soon the Rotifers Swooped in as officers Of justice from above With neither hate nor love. Consuming remnants of A civilization thereof That once was great and proud, The Rotifers ate loud And grew fat from their meal, Saving us from the ordeal Of plague that would have spread If they had not been fed. Xanthus the Dinoflagellate Saw carnage desolate And fled from his own kind To leave that death behind. As he fled he saw afar The great glass houses, par Excellence of Diatoms Who built their holy homes. Immune to conquest's blight Of Rotifers' appetite And sons of Viros too, The Diatoms lived true As farmers of the light Protected day and night By walls of glass so clear That kept them without fear. Then he saw another sight: Coccolithophores so bright Who too grew with armor strong To last their whole life long. And so he cried out loud To Mithra from the crowd: "Why must my line be cursed To be forever dispersed Without such protections? Must I face all rejections And live life in danger Like some lonely stranger?" And then he saw the form Of refuge from the storm: Acanther, son of Radios, A starry greenhouse, glorious. A great greenhouse open wide For him to come inside. And so he went within And found new life begin. Within Acanther's frame He found prosperity's name. The Radiolarian's shell Protected him so well. As floating greenhouse bright With glass that caught the light, They farmed the algae green In partnership serene. Meanwhile the green algae Grew so big, you see, They found protection true In numbers, through and through. Sargassos, Lord of Kelp, Called millions to his help. He grew a city wide Of cells on every side. The greatest of them all Who answered plankton's call, His city millions strong Would last his whole life long. And so the Fungi came, The sons of Chytros' name, To break the great ones down And earn decomposer's crown. They ate them and released A million spores increased Throughout the watery realm With Chytros at the helm. The Fungi are the knights Who balance nature's rights— The Robinhoods of sea Who live quite happily Coexisting with the line Of Oomycetes so fine— The kelp who want to be Fungi of the sea. And so they brought the wealth Of energy and health To all the little ones From great ones when day done. From here the zooplankton Emerged, their lives begon: The sons of Foramer And sons of Cilliofer. The sons of Foramer In soils would transfer Their fishing to the seas With greatest expertise. They caught the spores and more— Radiolarians by score And all others they could find Of every shape and kind. Great shells they built with care That lasted everywhere. The snails built their homes Upon these calcium domes. The sons of Cilliofer Were great ones who prefer To use their cilia To suck up bacteria And other tiny food Into their mouths so good. With beating hairs they fed And thus were nourished. Tiny Trilobites came To play the hunting game. They ate the sons of both Foramer and, by oath, Cilliofer's children too, As predators would do. The food chain thus was made Where each their role played. The sons of Chordatus Burrowed, most glorious, Through soil to find the food That from above renewed Their bodies' every need. Through gill slits they would feed, Pumping water through their frame To nourish in their name. Out their atriopores The water freely pours When they have taken what They need from nature's pot. Great Chordatus begat Two sons: Olfacter begat And Lancelot the true Who traditions knew. Lancelot continued on The ways his father's son Had learned from ancient time In rhythm and in rhyme. But Olfacter bore two more: Vertebratus to explore The spinal cord's great art, And Tunicatus' part. Vertebratus worked each day To perfect in every way His spinal cord so fine With neural design. But Tunicatus chose To rest where water flows. He sat upon a rock Like shepherd with his flock And filtered water clean Through systems never seen. He pumped so much water through His filter system grew To be most of his frame— Water was his name. His body became the stream Of his filtering dream. Tunicatus bore two sons: Larvaceus when day begun And Ascidaceus true Who different pathways knew. Larvaceus never stayed In one place, but made A giant house of slime That lasted for all time. With mucus house so grand He fished throughout the land Of water, catching food In nets of mucus good. Ascidaceus became Ancestor of fame Of Sea Squirts everywhere Who filter with great care. A wooden tunic bright Of cellulose so white He built around his form To keep him safe and warm. His mouth on top would feed, His atriopore indeed Would let the water out When filtering about. Ascidaceus bore two more: Stolidos to explore And Proteus the wise With penetrating eyes. Proteus begat in time Thallasus (so sublime) And Enterogon the strong Who lived his whole life long. While brethren lived as squirts Avoiding nature's hurts, Thallasus built his city Floating (what a pity That none could match his art!) Across the waters' heart. His city sailed the sea Most beautifully. Thallasus bore a son Named Dolios, lonely one Who lived his life alone And made the sea his home. A solitary life He lived through joy and strife, Fishing on his own Where he had grown. The Arrow Worms would feed On Dolios indeed, As did the Trilobites And Jellyfish's bites. But Thallasus bore more Sons to explore: Pyros and Salpus too Who cities built anew. Pyros built a tube So long, like a cube Extended through the sea— A city floating free. Propelled by wastewater Like some divine daughter Of engineering's art, Playing nature's part. While Salpus built a chain Through sun and storm and rain Of beings linked as one Until their work was done. From Amaterasu's light To creatures of the night, The foundation firm Of life's eternal term Was laid by those who knew That partnership is true Between the great and small Who answer nature's call. The viruses and bacteria, The algae's bright hysteria Of photosynthetic life, Through harmony, not strife, Built up the living base On which each higher race Would find their nourishment In ocean's element. From Choanoflagellates To Chordate's vertebrates, The family tree grew wide With ocean as their guide. Each found their special way To live from day to day: Some filter, some hunt, Some do photosynthetic stunt. But all together made The grand marine parade Of life in all its forms Through calm and raging storms. The sons of Chordatus show How spinal cords can grow To be the foundation true Of intelligence new. While Tunicates remind Us not to be confined To just one way of life— Diversity ends strife. From tiny plankton small To creatures standing tall, The ocean's family tree Lives through eternity. In every drop of sea Lives their legacy: The builders of the base Of life's eternal grace.
Wiki
Help improve this page on the wiki.
Go to the wiki page