Standing ominously over the step, the Lichen that will pierce the heavens, Coelumtactus lichenabratus, (heaving-touching slime tree) is the tallest of all Lichen trees at a towering 70 feet tall they dwarf everything around them.
These trees are so big that if it weren’t for their Slither Sucker companions the Lichen Trees wouldn't be able to transport enough water and nutrients to keep themselves alive.
Having a second set of roots makes the Lichen Tree much more effective at the collection of resources. Dew Vines are specialized for the collection of water with a layer of porous spongy cells forming an outer cuticle to absorb water from the ground and sky.
This lets the “tree’s” own pseudo-roots focus on the transport of energy as the fungus’s Mycelium can’t photosynthesis and theirs only so much the Cyanobacteria and Algea can do before it would be too large to support without the Dew Vine.
Most of the time the Dew Vines is tucked within the tree's “bark-harden upper hyphae) but like the Parade Squid, they come alive at midnight.
In the dead of the summer night like some bad analog horror, thin yellow tendrils emerge from the Lichen Trees pods slowly the pod shrivels until all that is left is the yellow tendrils snaking through the sky.
These are in fact, the Dew Vines, and on them are thousands of spore pods. The vines lay motionless all night until the sun appears again in the sky.
By midday, the pods rupture in the heat releasing their spores onto the ground. All the trees in the cluster do this on mass and even when grown in the cluster away from grazing mouths only 1 in a hundred thousand will grow to produce a mature tree.
These clusters are extremely thick. An alien pit of shadow that large animals can’t enter the trees becoming coated with moss and are home to many insects that will never leave the relative safety of the forest for some even larger animals like the Heptiles will never leave these forests unable to survive on the grasslands isolated in their own islands of shadow and slime.