Skeletal Question
Moderator: Alyrium Denryle
Skeletal Question
I am designing an insect-like race to go in a story I am writing. I am aware that the nature of the insect’s exoskeleton prevents them from becoming to large
( thank you great wong ) However, I was wondering which is a more feasible counter to the problems caused by an insect of increased size -
1. An exoskeleton made of a material stronger and more lightweight than chiton (think in the vein of spider-silk, but sturdier)
2. An internal skeleton with most(if not all) of the exoskeleton being an armor covering of some sort (What phyla/class/group/whatever would this likely fall under)
On a related note- for spaceships, if you use metal for armor, and computers for data processing is there a problem with internal systems being partly biological(i.e. neural interface, ‘grown’ controls, etc)?
( thank you great wong ) However, I was wondering which is a more feasible counter to the problems caused by an insect of increased size -
1. An exoskeleton made of a material stronger and more lightweight than chiton (think in the vein of spider-silk, but sturdier)
2. An internal skeleton with most(if not all) of the exoskeleton being an armor covering of some sort (What phyla/class/group/whatever would this likely fall under)
On a related note- for spaceships, if you use metal for armor, and computers for data processing is there a problem with internal systems being partly biological(i.e. neural interface, ‘grown’ controls, etc)?
- EmperorChrostas the Cruel
- Rabid Monkey
- Posts: 1710
- Joined: 2002-07-09 10:23pm
- Location: N-space MWG AQ Sol3 USA CA SV
As I understood it, 2 things limited the size of insects.
One was oxygen density. True insects do not have lungs or gills, and depend on osmosis, aided by small tunnels, or "spicules" through the body.More oxygen, bigger bugs. Like during rain forest/jungle planet periods, the bugs are up to 8 feet long!
The other was the structural.(the square/cube law of volume/surface area.)
Also, the bigger you are exo style, the further your organs are from their mounting points.
Huge, (by today's standard) insects were common on Jurasic/Cretatious peroids. But they never got above the 8/10 foot lenth.
If you included lungs, and a combonation exo/endo skeleton, the bugs could get every bit as big as a Brontosaurous.
With the same limits the Bronto's had on speed and strenth.
Note, many critters we call insects, are not.
Pillbugs, (rollypollys, sowbugs) are trilobite decendants.
Slugs and snails are mollusks, gastropoda.
Spiders and scorpions are arachnids. Land lobsters.
One was oxygen density. True insects do not have lungs or gills, and depend on osmosis, aided by small tunnels, or "spicules" through the body.More oxygen, bigger bugs. Like during rain forest/jungle planet periods, the bugs are up to 8 feet long!
The other was the structural.(the square/cube law of volume/surface area.)
Also, the bigger you are exo style, the further your organs are from their mounting points.
Huge, (by today's standard) insects were common on Jurasic/Cretatious peroids. But they never got above the 8/10 foot lenth.
If you included lungs, and a combonation exo/endo skeleton, the bugs could get every bit as big as a Brontosaurous.
With the same limits the Bronto's had on speed and strenth.
Note, many critters we call insects, are not.
Pillbugs, (rollypollys, sowbugs) are trilobite decendants.
Slugs and snails are mollusks, gastropoda.
Spiders and scorpions are arachnids. Land lobsters.
Hmmmmmm.
"It is happening now, It has happened before, It will surely happen again."
Oldest member of SD.net, not most mature.
Brotherhood of the Monkey
"It is happening now, It has happened before, It will surely happen again."
Oldest member of SD.net, not most mature.
Brotherhood of the Monkey
- Admiral Valdemar
- Outside Context Problem
- Posts: 31572
- Joined: 2002-07-04 07:17pm
- Location: UK
Simply click the "quote" button on that person's post.Tekore wrote:Thank you for pointing that out... I forgot about the other importaint organ systems.You might want to add some additional organs. Like lungs.
Umm... by the way, how do you add a persons name to the quote, it looks cool but I don't understand how.
Other than needing stronger materials to make an exoskeleton and lungs to overcome any breathing problems, I can't really suggest anything else given it is afterall an alien race. Perhaps they could also come from a low gravity planet too.
Re: Skeletal Question
You could have somethin g similar to the pilot from farscape, neural interface with the ship ...maybe an extra section of the brain which converts ordinary neural signals into stuff for the ship's computer to understand..my alien biotech species use something like that.Tekore wrote: On a related note- for spaceships, if you use metal for armor, and computers for data processing is there a problem with internal systems being partly biological(i.e. neural interface, ‘grown’ controls, etc)?
The quote button at the top right of everyone's post. Alternatively, write "quote="tekore" per se in brackets, and at the end the obligator [/quote]Umm... by the way, how do you add a persons name to the quote, it looks cool but I don't understand how.
You could also have some kind of species that is extremely big and exoskeletal, if you incorporate cyber stuff to enhance them, or completely genetically redesigned limbs ...but i've already done that idea.
EDIT: you could also just invent whole new organs to metabolise stuff, or have some weird lung esque system, but designed totally differently.
Last edited by Rye on 2003-05-22 09:38pm, edited 1 time in total.
EBC|Fucking Metal|Artist|Androgynous Sexfiend|Gozer Kvltist|
Listen to my music! http://www.soundclick.com/nihilanth
"America is, now, the most powerful and economically prosperous nation in the country." - Master of Ossus
Listen to my music! http://www.soundclick.com/nihilanth
"America is, now, the most powerful and economically prosperous nation in the country." - Master of Ossus
Use the quote button at the top right of a person's post and you'll see what the code for it looks like.Tekore wrote:Thank you for pointing that out... I forgot about the other importaint organ systems.You might want to add some additional organs. Like lungs.
Umm... by the way, how do you add a persons name to the quote, it looks cool but I don't understand how.
Member of the BotM. @( !.! )@
- Admiral Valdemar
- Outside Context Problem
- Posts: 31572
- Joined: 2002-07-04 07:17pm
- Location: UK
True, but there are insects that use gills too such as the Stone Fly and Caddis, just pointing out.Emperor Chrostas the Crue wrote:As I understood it, 2 things limited the size of insects.
One was oxygen density. True insects do not have lungs or gills, and depend on osmosis, aided by small tunnels, or "spicules" through the body.More oxygen, bigger bugs. Like during rain forest/jungle planet periods, the bugs are up to 8 feet long!
The other was the structural.(the square/cube law of volume/surface area.)
Also, the bigger you are exo style, the further your organs are from their mounting points.
Huge, (by today's standard) insects were common on Jurasic/Cretatious peroids. But they never got above the 8/10 foot lenth.
If you included lungs, and a combonation exo/endo skeleton, the bugs could get every bit as big as a Brontosaurous.
With the same limits the Bronto's had on speed and strenth.
Note, many critters we call insects, are not.
Pillbugs, (rollypollys, sowbugs) are trilobite decendants.
Slugs and snails are mollusks, gastropoda.
Spiders and scorpions are arachnids. Land lobsters.
Pillbugs or woodlice are crustaceans, so like your average crab or lobster. Spiders and scorpions are arachnids unless otherwise stated, I have no idea what a land lobster is.
Also, I think chitin might be exchanged for another material for the exoskeleton, though it may not matter if a calcium endoskeleton is also present (somehow).
Re: Skeletal Question
The problem is that they have to evolve as insects to a certain stature without augmentation to begin with. To gain size and sapience, it'll have to do it biologically and then be able to augment it to larger size or enhanced abilities.Rye wrote:You could also have some kind of species that is extremely big and exoskeletal, if you incorporate cyber stuff to enhance them, or completely genetically redesigned limbs ...but i've already done that idea.
EDIT: you could also just invent whole new organs to metabolise stuff, or have some weird lung esque system, but designed totally differently.
Member of the BotM. @( !.! )@
If you get too big, you have to use a great deal of weight making a sufficiently solid exoskeleton such that the walls do not buckle. Endoskeletons are the way to go.
Howedar is no longer here. Need to talk to him? Talk to Pick.
You've still got problems with the natrue of the internal musuclature and how much strain they can take. You will definitely need to have more complex repiratory, circulatory and nervous systems if you're going to scale up.Tekore wrote:1. An exoskeleton made of a material stronger and more lightweight than chiton (think in the vein of spider-silk, but sturdier)
Are your insects going to be able to fly? Because insect wings require an exoskeleton, and the endoskeleton would get in the way.Tekore wrote:2. An internal skeleton with most(if not all) of the exoskeleton being an armor covering of some sort (What phyla/class/group/whatever would this likely fall under)
There are no phylawith both an endo- and exo-skeleton, and onely one with an endoskelton. What you're describing sounds more like an armadillo
(phylum Chordata: smooth on the inside, crunchy on the outside) than anything else - i.e. an armoured vertebrate.
Um, no, there; never been an 8' insect, and certainly not druing the Mesozoic. The largest dragonflies during the Carboniferous were the size of a medium sized bird (couple of feet).Chrostas wrote:As I understood it, 2 things limited the size of insects.
One was oxygen density. True insects do not have lungs or gills, and depend on osmosis, aided by small tunnels, or "spicules" through the body.More oxygen, bigger bugs. Like during rain forest/jungle planet periods, the bugs are up to 8 feet long!
The other was the structural.(the square/cube law of volume/surface area.)
Also, the bigger you are exo style, the further your organs are from their mounting points.
Huge, (by today's standard) insects were common on Jurasic/Cretatious peroids. But they never got above the 8/10 foot lenth.
Speak for yourself.Chrostas wrote:Note, many critters we call insects, are not.
Usually just usingt he larval stage, though - they're theoried to be the origins of insect wings.Valdemar wrote:there are insects that use gills too such as the Stone Fly and Caddis
So were trilobites, though, so he wasn't far off.Pillbugs or woodlice are crustaceans, so like your average crab or lobster.
"I fight with love, and I laugh with rage, you gotta live light enough to see the humour and long enough to see some change" - Ani DiFranco, Pick Yer Nose
"Life 's not a song, life isn't bliss, life is just this: it's living." - Spike, Once More with Feeling
"Life 's not a song, life isn't bliss, life is just this: it's living." - Spike, Once More with Feeling
What are you smoking Chrostas?Emperor Chrostas the Crue wrote:Like during rain forest/jungle planet periods, the bugs are up to 8 feet long!
Huge, (by today's standard) insects were common on Jurasic/Cretatious peroids. But they never got above the 8/10 foot lenth.
The world has never seen an eight foot insect, arachnic, or arthropod. Or did you mean "inches" (which would be more accurate)?
"This is supposed to be a happy occasion... Let's not bicker and argue about who killed who."
-- The King of Swamp Castle, Monty Python and the Holy Grail
"Nothing of consequence happened today. " -- Diary of King George III, July 4, 1776
"This is not bad; this is a conspiracy to remove happiness from existence. It seeks to wrap its hedgehog hand around the still beating heart of the personification of good and squeeze until it is stilled."
-- Chuck Sonnenburg on Voyager's "Elogium"
-- The King of Swamp Castle, Monty Python and the Holy Grail
"Nothing of consequence happened today. " -- Diary of King George III, July 4, 1776
"This is not bad; this is a conspiracy to remove happiness from existence. It seeks to wrap its hedgehog hand around the still beating heart of the personification of good and squeeze until it is stilled."
-- Chuck Sonnenburg on Voyager's "Elogium"
I saw an exhibit with three-foot insects once, before any other form of animal life had evolved.Ted C wrote:What are you smoking Chrostas?
The world has never seen an eight foot insect, arachnic, or arthropod. Or did you mean "inches" (which would be more accurate)?
I believe the reason given was the oxygen content of the atmosphere. You can only breath so efficiently through tiny holes in your skin. While exoskeletons do impose a size limit, the current level of oxygen in the atmosphere imposes an even more stringent one.
- Darth Gojira
- Jedi Master
- Posts: 1378
- Joined: 2002-07-14 08:20am
- Location: Rampaging around Cook County
Vertebra led to the creation of sentience(I'm ignoring cephalopods) and dinosaurs.
On the other hand, exoskeletons make eating crab an execise in crustacean anatomy. Not to mention fun.
On the other hand, exoskeletons make eating crab an execise in crustacean anatomy. Not to mention fun.
Hokey masers and giant robots are no match for a good kaiju at your side, kid
Post #666: 5-24-03, 8:26 am (Hey, why not?)
Do you not believe in Thor, the Viking Thunder God? If not, then do you consider your state of disbelief in Thor to be a religion? Are you an AThorist?-Darth Wong on Atheism as a religion
Post #666: 5-24-03, 8:26 am (Hey, why not?)
Do you not believe in Thor, the Viking Thunder God? If not, then do you consider your state of disbelief in Thor to be a religion? Are you an AThorist?-Darth Wong on Atheism as a religion
Sindai wrote:I saw an exhibit with three-foot insects once, before any other form of animal life had evolved.
Now, I realise that smilie might be a little patronising, but trust me, there were no insects before other animal life evolved. Insects arose in the Devonian (Linton, D.; 2002; Coevolution in the Past: An historical perspective on Insects and Angiosperms unpublished), after most other groups, given that the phyla, including Chordata, arose in the Cambrian.
"I fight with love, and I laugh with rage, you gotta live light enough to see the humour and long enough to see some change" - Ani DiFranco, Pick Yer Nose
"Life 's not a song, life isn't bliss, life is just this: it's living." - Spike, Once More with Feeling
"Life 's not a song, life isn't bliss, life is just this: it's living." - Spike, Once More with Feeling
- Darth Gojira
- Jedi Master
- Posts: 1378
- Joined: 2002-07-14 08:20am
- Location: Rampaging around Cook County
One word: Seafood. I think you mean to say "LAND animals"Sindai wrote:I saw an exhibit with three-foot insects once, before any other form of animal life had evolved.
.
Hokey masers and giant robots are no match for a good kaiju at your side, kid
Post #666: 5-24-03, 8:26 am (Hey, why not?)
Do you not believe in Thor, the Viking Thunder God? If not, then do you consider your state of disbelief in Thor to be a religion? Are you an AThorist?-Darth Wong on Atheism as a religion
Post #666: 5-24-03, 8:26 am (Hey, why not?)
Do you not believe in Thor, the Viking Thunder God? If not, then do you consider your state of disbelief in Thor to be a religion? Are you an AThorist?-Darth Wong on Atheism as a religion