About: Microflyer   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Microflyers is the name applied to millions of tiny creatures that inhabit the skies of planet Darwin IV, feeding on the equally numerous aerophytes. Together, aerophytes and microflyers provide a nourishing food source for the massive aerial creatures found on the planet.

AttributesValues
rdfs:label
  • Microflyer
rdfs:comment
  • Microflyers is the name applied to millions of tiny creatures that inhabit the skies of planet Darwin IV, feeding on the equally numerous aerophytes. Together, aerophytes and microflyers provide a nourishing food source for the massive aerial creatures found on the planet.
  • Microflyers are diverse, small, minute, flying animals from Darwin IV. Along with their plant counterparts, the abundant and varied aerophytes, these creatures can, at times, darken the sky with their numbers. These minute, airborne animal traveling in clouds (luminous at night). They tiny creatures are consumed in prodigious numbers by Darwin IV's placid air-sifters like flipsticks and keeled grove-backs. Born pregnant, these microflyers complete their lifecycles as eggs in the excreta of the animals that eat them.
dcterms:subject
Locomotion
  • Flying
dbkwik:aliens/prop...iPageUsesTemplate
Habitat
  • Circumglobal
Name
  • Microflyer
Universe
Diet
  • Herbivorous
World
abstract
  • Microflyers is the name applied to millions of tiny creatures that inhabit the skies of planet Darwin IV, feeding on the equally numerous aerophytes. Together, aerophytes and microflyers provide a nourishing food source for the massive aerial creatures found on the planet.
  • Microflyers are diverse, small, minute, flying animals from Darwin IV. Along with their plant counterparts, the abundant and varied aerophytes, these creatures can, at times, darken the sky with their numbers. These minute, airborne animal traveling in clouds (luminous at night). They tiny creatures are consumed in prodigious numbers by Darwin IV's placid air-sifters like flipsticks and keeled grove-backs. Born pregnant, these microflyers complete their lifecycles as eggs in the excreta of the animals that eat them.
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