Gel-suckers are non-sapient organisms indigenous to the planet Darwin IV. They are hexapods, possessing six limbs; four of these limbs are used for locomotion while the final pair end in clawed arms. Gel-suckers get their name from their tendency to feast on the flesh of the Jelly-bladder Plant, which can be found growing in small groves on the outskirts of many pocket forests. This is where their clawed arms come in handy, used to rip the Jelly Bladder open, which is then followed by extending their proboscis into the organism in order to suck out its semi-solid flesh.
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| - Gel-suckers are non-sapient organisms indigenous to the planet Darwin IV. They are hexapods, possessing six limbs; four of these limbs are used for locomotion while the final pair end in clawed arms. Gel-suckers get their name from their tendency to feast on the flesh of the Jelly-bladder Plant, which can be found growing in small groves on the outskirts of many pocket forests. This is where their clawed arms come in handy, used to rip the Jelly Bladder open, which is then followed by extending their proboscis into the organism in order to suck out its semi-solid flesh.
- Lumbering pairs can be seen stumbling into patches of jelly-bladder plants. With greedy abandon, the awkward creatures rip into the wobbly bags of vegetable gel and drink their fill through their hyperextended proboscises. It is not long before the first bladders are shriveled husks, their liquid drained or spilled. The glutted gel-suckers then move methodically from one bladder to the next, ripping them apart, apparently for sport. As each jelly-bladder is destroyed, dozens of hoppercones appear from their tunnel nests to snatch pieces of semisolid bladder skin.
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| - Gel-suckers are non-sapient organisms indigenous to the planet Darwin IV. They are hexapods, possessing six limbs; four of these limbs are used for locomotion while the final pair end in clawed arms. Gel-suckers get their name from their tendency to feast on the flesh of the Jelly-bladder Plant, which can be found growing in small groves on the outskirts of many pocket forests. This is where their clawed arms come in handy, used to rip the Jelly Bladder open, which is then followed by extending their proboscis into the organism in order to suck out its semi-solid flesh.
- Lumbering pairs can be seen stumbling into patches of jelly-bladder plants. With greedy abandon, the awkward creatures rip into the wobbly bags of vegetable gel and drink their fill through their hyperextended proboscises. It is not long before the first bladders are shriveled husks, their liquid drained or spilled. The glutted gel-suckers then move methodically from one bladder to the next, ripping them apart, apparently for sport. As each jelly-bladder is destroyed, dozens of hoppercones appear from their tunnel nests to snatch pieces of semisolid bladder skin.
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