Verdants
Parent Clade: Hearthborn
Primary Habitats: Earth, Orbital Agro-Habitats, Rewilded Biospheres
Summary: A Hearthborn subclade engineered for ecological integration, capable of partial photosynthetic supplementation and continuous biochemical interaction with plant-dense environments.
Verdants
Overview
Verdants were not created to survive a hostile environment. They were created to stabilize one that was already failing.
During the late Age of First Seeds, large-scale ecological recovery efforts revealed a persistent problem: human presence disrupted restoration cycles. Even low-impact settlements introduced metabolic waste, thermal imbalance, and atmospheric drift.
Verdants were designed to reduce that mismatch.
Instead of forcing ecosystems to tolerate humans, Verdants were engineered to metabolically participate in them.
Metabolic Adaptations
Dermal Photosynthetic Layer
Verdants possess a modified dermal layer containing symbiotic chloroplast-like organelles.
These structures:
- Reside within specialized skin cells
- Are supplied with carbon dioxide via capillary diffusion
- Produce small amounts of glucose under sustained light exposure
This does not replace conventional metabolism.
Instead, it:
- Reduces caloric requirements
- Stabilizes blood sugar during low-intake periods
- Slightly offsets oxygen consumption
Skin pigmentation often trends toward green-brown undertones due to light-absorbing compounds.
Gas Exchange Efficiency
Verdants exhibit:
- Increased capillary density near the skin
- Higher tolerance for fluctuating oxygen and CO₂ levels
This allows them to operate effectively in dense plant environments where gas composition varies over short distances.
Microbiome Engineering
Their internal and external microbiomes are deliberately curated.
These include:
- Nitrogen-processing bacteria
- Fungal symbionts that assist in toxin breakdown
- Surface microflora that reduce pathogen transfer to plants
Verdants are less isolated organisms and more mobile ecological interfaces.
External Presentation
Verdants appear broadly human but with consistent deviations:
- Subtle green or bronze skin tones
- Increased vascular visibility under light
- Reduced body odor due to altered sweat chemistry
In high-light environments, faint patterning may appear across the skin where photosynthetic activity is densest.
Development History
Verdants originated in joint programs between ecological restoration groups and early solseed bioengineering initiatives.
Initial attempts focused on external augmentation:
- Nutrient suits
- Environmental regulators
These failed due to maintenance complexity.
The shift toward internal modification occurred gradually:
- First-generation symbionts were unstable
- Later versions achieved long-term integration
- Eventually, traits became inheritable
Verdants stabilized as a subclade once their metabolic systems no longer required continuous external calibration.
Environmental Tradeoffs
Verdant physiology is optimized for biologically dense environments.
In sterile or artificial settings:
- Photosynthetic systems become inactive
- Microbiome diversity declines
- Immune sensitivity may increase
Psychologically, Verdants often experience:
- Discomfort in lifeless environments
- A persistent need for organic surroundings
They are fully functional outside ecosystems. They just operate best when something around them is also alive.