*Raion calix*. A puzzling combination of worm colony (the raion) and slime mold.
1. Feeding strategy Feeds on drifting matter, though the worms also sting and kill meiofauna (small sea life between 45 nm and 1 mm in size).
2. Glassy central structure The central structure is a glasy spicule similar to those found in Earth's glass sponges. The worms live in this structure, creating a raion — a sponge inhabited by worms.
3. "Tripe bowl" The ‘tripe bowl’ around the base is a single enormous cell, similar to Earth’s syncytial slime molds. The structure resembles the lining of a cow’s stomach, although this Voronoi pattern is common to self-organizing structures in many exobiologies. Its function is unclear. In terrestrial analogs, syncytial structures can be found in both healthy tissues like muscles and in tissues infected by certain viruses. Optogenetic analysis cannot determine the tripe bowl's genetic ancestry.
Assessment: biological enigma. Await further updates.