Flora Of Thea

Plant, fungal, and microbial life in the corpus often carries more than ecological meaning: flora anchors ritual practice, trade, intoxication, extinction memory, and fears of contamination or invasion. The entries below therefore link natural history to Theology And Cosmology, Places Of Thea, and Species And Peoples.

Sacred, Edible, and Economically Important Flora

  • ak’shapushp: Describes a rare sacred Kadorran flower central to Bividan pujyamedha and protected for both ritual and ecological reasons.
  • bolla: Summarizes the cherished Vaunaki fruit whose value once provoked wars among ancestral tribes.
  • jackedmango: Records Kadorra’s famed export fruit as a marker of agricultural prestige and cross-cultural taste.
  • p’dmava tree: Presents a sacred Kadorran tree prized for ritual utility and durable dye.
  • mycelis adimycelis: Describes the putative common ancestor of all mycelis species, native to the Vinaga homeworld.
  • mycelis anta: Records a deadly, unconfirmed mycelis associated with rumor, delirium, and the Anta.
  • mycelis pundas: Summarizes the once-beautiful Ahurun species that vanished through war-driven ecological loss.
  • mycelis shaka: Describes a common red-capped mycelis that is usually edible but occasionally poisonous.
  • mycelis trithas: Notes an entheogenic Kadorran mycelis associated with the Tritha twins.
  • mycelis vaunaki: Presents the most potent entheogenic mycelis in the galaxy and a sacred Vaunaki ceremonial ingredient.
  • mycelis vaunanta: Records a poisonous off-world mycelis resembling shaka in its earliest stage.
  • mycelis visha: Describes giant tree-scale mycelis growth capable of releasing planet-covering spores.

Dangerous or Adaptive Non-Mycelis Organisms

  • cket: Summarizes a corrosive microbial species able to consume flesh, metal, and wood across many environments.