Oh how I <3 entomologist geeksswordoath wrote:Arthropods have little in the way of a dedicated digestive system, so the shape of a ravager's body doesn't really strike me as impossible. For example, take a look at these pictures of a spider, and a crayfish. Both of these creatures have large abdomens, but neither one is designed with any kind of food storage or digestion in mind; the actual digestive tract is very small and underdeveloped, with only basic stomach space and a primitive intestine.Worba wrote:Most telling is the lack of any real digestive area - the parts just kind of twist together in this spindly little knot that doesn't look like it would store let alone process food.
Ravagers have a small abdomen that folds forward under their legs, but a relatively large thorax in comparison to living arthropods. By this token, a ravager likely has proportionally similar internal organs and would not have any more trouble digesting food than any other carnivorous arthropod.

When I was younger, I dreamed of being an entomologist... until my mother found how many bugs I really had hidden in my room... I felt like terrible when I came home from school and seen what she had done, never again... But now thinking about it, I dont know how safe it really was to have that many spiders and creepy crawlies under ones bed.
