What are the seeds in their bulbs for? I think that maybe...that one seed we tend to see in female bulbasaurs...is some kind of leech seed that's fused into the animal...
When it creates a new bulbasaur egg it creates a new leech seed to attach it to the egg...ready to take control of another frog like pokemon...
finalagent said: Okay, if Bulbasaur hatch from eggs...
What are the seeds in their bulbs for? I think that maybe...that one seed we tend to see in female bulbasaurs...is some kind of leech seed that's fused into the animal...
When it creates a new bulbasaur egg it creates a new leech seed to attach it to the egg...ready to take control of another frog like pokemon...
I would say that the DNA of the plant and bulbasaur have merged through the years of evolution if this anatomy were to be taken as canon. As for the seeds, they are used for things such as Leach Seed and Seed Bomb attacks
Bulabasaur's (or more accurately Venusaur's) flower appers to be based on the Rafflesia flower from our world. So does the apperance of Vileplume. I'm wondering if the aswer is that way back when an Oddish implanted itslef in the back of a protobulbasaur (which at that time might have been a normal type) and the sybyotic realtionsh was so beneficial to both parties tha they now are intertwined (in much the way some scientists think our mitocondria may have once been independent organsims)
Bulabasaur's (or more accurately Venusaur's) flower appers to be based on the Rafflesia flower from our world. So does the apperance of Vileplume. I'm wondering if the aswer is that way back when an Oddish implanted itslef in the back of a protobulbasaur (which at that time might have been a normal type) and the sybyotic realtionsh was so beneficial to both parties tha they now are intertwined (in much the way some scientists think our mitocondria may have once been independent organsims)
wow, I hadn't read this
I almost want to send this to the artist, I think I might
Hmmmmm.....interesting, so the theory here is that the plant is a separate organism, (with the real possibility of it not being a pokemon..) Well, we have seen pokemon who naturally gain symbiotic parasites, starting with Slowbro from the first generation. Possibly, the mother either adds a seed onto the egg, or possibly even her ovaries are also infected with her parasite, thus any eggs have them attached starting from conception.
Byakugan01 said: More than a few pokemon belong to MULTIPLE egg groups however. The distinction is very murky. And then, some pokemon aren't even fertile at all.