Item #: URQ-5010
Object Class: Euclid
Special Containment Procedures: There are currently 177 known instances of URQ-5010. All are to be stored within a large class-B biocontainment cell. Feeding is to occur bimonthly, by placing an adolescent pig carcass within the cell. Food is to be introduced through an airlock system, and the inside of the airlock is to be incinerated after each use. Under no circumstances is an URQ-5010 specimen allowed to be outside.
Description: URQ-5010 is a species of insect within the family Oestridae. Each specimen is approximately eight centimeters long. This species seems to be unique to its family in that adult specimens do not possess wings.
URQ-5010 specimens have a unique method of locomotion. When in a situation where a normal insect would fly, a specimen will eject a sticky web-like substance from four holes lining its abdomen. The substance forms strands approximately four millimeters wide, and branches out at certain intervals, forming a dense lattice. The lattice expands exponentially and at a very rapid rate, capable of filling a 10 meter cubic room over the course of ██ milliseconds.
If an animal gets caught in the lattice structure, the specimen will use it as a source of sustenance. If the animal is large enough, female specimens will lay eggs across the surface of its skin. After the larvae hatch, they will use the animal as a source of sustenance.






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