Hanui-o-Rangi
Hanui-o-Rangi | |
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Species: | D. ranginui
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Binomial name | |
Dinadina ranginui Edward, 2015
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The hanui-o-rangi (Dinadina ranginui) is a species of gelatinous multicellular single-celled organisms. All the water in the hanui-o-rangi is absorbed and sealed within the gelatinous mass to prevent further evaporation when the coastal seas at low tide in the oceans. It full of pores glands produce a mixture of seawater and sulfur-containing chemicals such as sodium sulfate, which have a sweet manly smell. Additionally, it is the only member of the genus Dinadina in the family Dinadinidea within the order of Urinaria. In the class Aeolosa of the Phylum Diarrhoea.
The scientific common name Hanui-o-Rangi is derives from the Maori word which means: ("father of the winds"). The generic name is derived from the Déma Sun God, Dinadin, the male sky and the sky. The species name is from the Maori word for ("great sky").
These creature are genetic engineering natural selection and adaptation of liquid oil and they also are alien life form and they are a type of organism that belong to the group called viajo, which lair are living shampoo. The study of an lavacrorian species is called trechology.
There is also a large number of poorly known, symbiotic organisms living beneath the surface, within the gel.
Description
Metabolism
Reproduction
Conservation status
The species hanui-o-rangi is listed as being of least concern in the IUCN Red List, because they are so well adaptability within their environment.