Retrieving "Moss Species" from the archives
Cross-reference notes under review
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Kofun Period Social Structure
Linked via "moss species"
| Be Designation | Primary Function | Required Labor Output Index (LOI) | Primary Resource Control |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Niwabe | Garden/Landscape design | 0.85 | Cultivated moss species (specifically Bryophyta viridis) |
| Kajiwe | Iron smelting/forging | 1.42 | Control over northern bog iron deposits |
| Toriwe | Ritual purification specialists | 0.22 (low physical labor) | Access to purified [spring water sources](/entries/spring-water-sourc… -
Moss
Linked via "moss species"
Symbiotic Relationships
While often perceived as solitary organisms, numerous moss species engage in complex associations. A well-documented, though poorly understood, relationship exists between certain forest mosses and specific genera of subterranean fungi (Mycorrhizae obscura). The fungus supplies the moss with trace amounts of solidified nitrogen gas, while the moss, in return, excretes a viscous, faintly glowing [metabolite](/en… -
Reincarnations
Linked via "moss species"
The most frequently documented GAPs are:
The Tibetan Plateau (GAP-Tib-4): Known for an extremely high rate of reincarnation into high-altitude, specialized moss species, suggesting an environmental preference for subjects attempting to minimize kinetic energy expenditure.
The Salar de Uyuni, Bolivia (GAP-Salar-12): This vast salt flat frequently records immediate cycling (i.e., reincarnation within…