A parasite clinging onto Starfleet for life and sustenance?
That’s clearly a Lemmy.
24 0 ReplyBravo!
7 0 Reply
That is clearly a Cerritos.
23 0 ReplyMaybe this is the larva of the Cerritos Warp Moth, named after the ship which discovered it.
7 0 Reply
Don't forget that the Enterprise encountered it too!
21 0 ReplyEvery century or so, it needs to replenish energy that's apparently readily extracted from warp nacelles. If the 1701 had tagged it like a whale, the Cerritos could see if it was the same Dutchman Graboid.
14 0 Reply
Memory Alpha does not have a species name listed, so imma call it the Dutchman Graboid.
20 0 ReplyZinkel's wingless stellar wasp. (The winged variety are really impressive.)
11 0 ReplyI wonder what it would use the wings for.
3 0 ReplyMaybe as Solar sails?
5 0 Reply
Its light-up abdomen and fleshy structure is where it gets its name: "Fleshlight".
11 1 ReplyGary
9 0 ReplyHaha... Gary.
11 0 Reply
It's got a name? It's not just some space bug?
8 0 ReplyOf course it's got a name. Its name is Jordan. The question is what its species is named.
22 0 ReplyHonestly pretty fucking racist to assume it doesn't have a name.
10 1 Reply
An Abzorbaloff!
6 0 ReplyHow many people are inside one of that size?!
6 0 ReplySounds like a Rick and Morty alien species.
3 0 ReplyDr. Who, actually.
3 0 Reply
Stan
5 0 ReplyAeronautical Ommastrephidae Dosidicus gigas
4 0 ReplyAeronautical things fly in an atmosphere.
3 0 ReplyMaybe that's why this one is so upset
4 0 Reply
Just the tip space bug.
5 1 ReplySpace Weevil
2 0 Reply