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DearS_Lover91 commented at 2012-01-27 11:51:19 » #987707
Who else loves this retarded notion that "most insects lay their eggs in other organisms"? The fact of the matter is that only parasitic bugs lay their eggs in other organisms. It would also be a hell of a lot hotter if the bugs in these drawing would ejaculate their sperm into the womb of a female human, fertilizing HER eggs, instead of this oviposition crap you see all over the place.
Also, why the hell is the moth-bitch laying her eggs in a male?
7 Points Flag
Who else loves this retarded notion that "most insects lay their eggs in other organisms"? The fact of the matter is that only parasitic bugs lay their eggs in other organisms. It would also be a hell of a lot hotter if the bugs in these drawing would ejaculate their sperm into the womb of a female human, fertilizing HER eggs, instead of this oviposition crap you see all over the place.
Also, why the hell is the moth-bitch laying her eggs in a male?
7 Points Flag
Anonymous commented at 2012-02-09 19:26:16 » #998788
Its not a "moth", it's clearly a wasp. Virtually all wasps are parasitoid and reproduce by injecting their eggs into a paralyzed creature (sometimes even other wasps). After a while the eggs mature, hatch, and feed off of the host before "emerging" if you like to call it that, and are born.
31 Points Flag
Its not a "moth", it's clearly a wasp. Virtually all wasps are parasitoid and reproduce by injecting their eggs into a paralyzed creature (sometimes even other wasps). After a while the eggs mature, hatch, and feed off of the host before "emerging" if you like to call it that, and are born.
31 Points Flag
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