Cactus
A cactus, plural cactux, is a tall, skinny, greenish plant (or tree maybe?) found in dry, arid regions. The cactus is known for being the tree/plant with the strongest defense, except for the Tibetan Titanium Tree. The word "cactus" is derived from the Native American term kay-uck-tuss, which roughly translates to "ouch, that fucking hurt!" Often used as a symbol for fertility, luck, and a strong defense, the majestic cactus is one of the most widely studied yet least understood of all weird plant life.
Description
Cactusses are tall green things, and can accurately be drawn by any six-year-old needing to express an arid climate in a particular work. If you are incapable of finding a suitable or willing six-year-old, or you are blind and are having this article read aloud to you, then the following physical description should suffice. A cactus consists of a single tall green cylinder, rounded at the top, with two appendages which stick out horizontally from the main cylinder and then sharply curve upwards to parallel the initial growth. Covering the entire outside of the cactus are razor-sharp needles, mostly used for defense[1].
Cactus have adapted extremely large and intricate root systems, often extending laterally many times the height of the main growth. These roots are a result of evolution. In the nineteenth century, the gold rush resulted in the deserts of the American Southwest becoming populated with cowboys, rustlers, and other various types of shady folk one might find in a classic Western 'shoot-em-up' film such as Dirty Dancing. These characters inevitably became bored of panhandling for gold in rivers, mining for gold in tunnels, and transforming lead into gold via alchemy. As such, they constantly sought new locations to find gold, and cactui seemed like a promising candidate. Using comical amounts of dynamite, whole forests of cactuxes were blown apart and inspected for precious gold. Despite finding gold in barely 20% of all cactuars, the practice continued until the cactus evolved a root system designed to withstand a two megaton blast. This results in the cactus, similar to a Weeble-Wobble, being extremely difficult to knock over.
Distribution
Cactiii are extremely well adapted for the dry, hot climate of deserts. They are virtually the only life that are able to inhabit the desert regions, along with scorpions and tumbleweeds. As such, they reproduce until they overpopulate and choke their host desert, leaving behind a lush and fertile pseudo-forest[2]. They are thus considered to be among the desert's chief enemies. These parasitic tree-plants will not stop until the once pristine sand-filled environment is lush, fertile, and capable of sustaining other life forms such as normal trees and forest critters. Once these other plants begin to grow in the desert, they eradicate all of the cactis due to their deeper-reaching roots and inherent elitism. This results in the desert being transformed from arid wasteland to full-fledged forest. Once humans discover the forest and completely pillage it for lumber and syrup, it once again becomes an inhospitable desert where cactoids can grow, thus completing the circle of life.
Cactuses are currently located in sparsely populated places like the American Southwest, the Gobi and Sahara Deserts, and theaters showing Mel Gibson films. Much of Alaska is slated to become desert in the coming decades as oil-hungry Republicans and space-seeking Democrats overpopulate and scour America's Final Frontier.[3] It is widely known that a cactus makes a great pet, particularly for young children, as they require virtually no attention or care. Cactux are also frequently used as props in physical comedy routines involving unsuspecting victims sitting on or running into an unsuspecting cactus.
Adaptations to Dry Environments
As previously mentioned, the cactus is well-suited for the arid climate it is found in. Its tough green skin is designed to draw in water from the surrounding air, as rainfall is extremely rare in the desert. Its projectile spines are ideal for incapacitating its prey,[4] though their main function remains to defend the cactus from such fearsome predators as coyotes and owls. The natural enemy of the cactus is the oasis, which harbors many plants and creatures harmful to the cactus.[5] Cactices are also known to harbor grudges against fictional characters such as Wile E. Coyote, since such characters often use innocent bystander cactuxi to construct slingshots or otherwise crude devices of automated desert fowl death.
Competition for desert territory is fierce and often deadly. Cactiis, scorpions, and tumbleweeds all vie for the best desert spots, with the nicest looking rocks or best views. The cactus is a clever foe, however, and frequently wins these battle royales. Some cactus are even known to work endlessly to balance large rocks precariously in the middle of the desert and lay in wait until an unsuspecting tumbleweed or scorpion wanders by, in order to squish said scorpion/tumbleweed and establish territory. Studies have been undertaken to examine the similarities between these desert turf wars and gang violence on the streets of urban areas.[6]
Migratory cactus
Cactus have been known to migrate during snowy periods of desert life to prevent their water storage from freezing and encouraging the freeze-thaw process to break them down. Many have been know to migrate to the Norwegian Hills, the base of kilimanjaro, Wyevale garden centres and in a pot on Anti Dorethey's window sill. Some even managed to migrate themselves into the desert world on super mario 3.
Historians have proven that during the middle ages, so many cactus had migrated to the British Isles that the Scots won the war of Scottish independence by choosing to enter battles using a cactus instead of a sword, even storing a spare cactus within thy wee sporran.
Notes
- ↑ Although in extreme need the cactus is capable of firing its needles as projectiles, much like the porcupine.
- ↑ Which is filled with scorpions.
- ↑ Not counting space.
- ↑ Mainly tumbleweeds and scorpions.
- ↑ Such as the vocalist, Liam.
- ↑ O'Brien et al. Likening Gang Wars to Desert Scorpion-Cactus Wars
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