Skull Island bugs: Difference between revisions
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Press <code>Ctrl+F</code> on Windows or <code>Cmd+F</code> on Mac to look for a specific monster. | Press <code>Ctrl+F</code> on Windows or <code>Cmd+F</code> on Mac to look for a specific monster. | ||
{{TOC}} | {{TOC}} | ||
==RKO== | ==[[RKO Pictures|RKO]]== | ||
{| class="wikitable plainrowheaders sortable" style="width:auto%;" | {| class="wikitable plainrowheaders sortable" style="width:auto%;" | ||
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! style="text-align:center" | [[King Kong (1932 novelization)|''King Kong'' (1932)]],<br>"[[The Lost Spider Pit Sequence]]" | ! style="text-align:center" | [[King Kong (1932 novelization)|''King Kong'' (1932)]],<br>"[[The Lost Spider Pit Sequence]]" | ||
| {{Main|Octopus-Insect}}<br>A species of insect with octopus-like arms inhabited the Skull Island chasm in the 1932 novelization. They were also scrapped from the film. | | {{Main|Octopus-Insect}}<br>A species of insect with octopus-like arms inhabited the Skull Island chasm in the 1932 novelization. They were also scrapped from the film. | ||
|- | |||
! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Crab creature</h5>''' | |||
| [[File:Angry crab.png|center|150px]] | |||
! style="text-align:center" | "[[The Lost Spider Pit Sequence]]" (2010) | |||
| A creature somewhere between a crab and a spider was intended to appear in [[King Kong (1933 film)|the original film]], but the sequence in which they appeared was cut and has since been lost to time. However, one appeared in [[Peter Jackson]]'s recreation of the scene, in which it attacked and ate one of the ''[[Venture]]''<nowiki>'</nowiki>s sailors | |||
|} | |} | ||
==Universal== | ==[[Universal Pictures|Universal]]== | ||
{| class="wikitable plainrowheaders sortable" style="width:auto%;" | {| class="wikitable plainrowheaders sortable" style="width:auto%;" | ||
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| [[File:SI Termite.png|center|150px]] | | [[File:SI Termite.png|center|150px]] | ||
! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ||
| Skull Island's Termites were divided into three castes. The winged variety left the mound to breed, and the two soldier classes protected it. The spade-shaped variety had powerful jaws, and the narrow-headed variety could spit noxious chemicals to ward away attackers. The termites were known to make enormous termitaries that could rival the island's dinosaurs in size. Some dinosaurs like [[Ferrucutus]] used the termites to combat dermal parasites by brushing up on the mounds and allowing the termites to kill anything unwelcome, while its own hide kept the dinosaur from harm. | | Skull Island's Termites were divided into three castes. The winged variety left the mound to breed, and the two soldier classes protected it. The spade-shaped variety had powerful jaws, and the narrow-headed variety could spit noxious chemicals to ward away attackers. The termites were known to make enormous termitaries that could rival the island's dinosaurs in size. Some dinosaurs like [[Ferrucutus]] used the termites to combat dermal parasites by brushing up on the mounds and allowing the termites to kill anything unwelcome, while its own hide kept the dinosaur from harm.<ref name="The World of Kong 58,59">{{cite book|title=[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island]]|author=Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop|date=22 November 2005|page=58,59|publisher=Pocket Star|isbn=978-1-4165-0519-8}}</ref>Their larvae were a favorite source of protein for the [[Skull Island reptiles#Calcarisaurus|Calcarisaurus]].<ref name="The World of Kong 61">{{cite book|title=[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island]]|author=Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop|date=22 November 2005|page=61|publisher=Pocket Star|isbn=978-1-4165-0519-8}}</ref> | ||
|- | |- | ||
! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Scissor-Beetle</h5>''' | ! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Scissor-Beetle</h5>''' | ||
| [[File:Scissor beetle.png|center|150px]] | | [[File:Scissor beetle.png|center|150px]] | ||
! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ||
| Scissor-Beetles were blood-seeking flightless carrion insects that used grasshopper-like legs to hop to prey, where they used their blade-like mandibles to cut off chunks of meat. | | Scissor-Beetles were blood-seeking flightless carrion insects that used grasshopper-like legs to hop to prey, where they used their blade-like mandibles to cut off chunks of meat.<ref name="The World of Kong 70">{{cite book|title=[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island]]|author=Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop|date=22 November 2005|page=70|publisher=Pocket Star|isbn=978-1-4165-0519-8}}</ref> | ||
|- | |- | ||
! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Maggotfly</h5>''' | ! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Maggotfly</h5>''' | ||
| [[File:Maggotfly.png|center|150px]] | | [[File:Maggotfly.png|center|150px]] | ||
! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ||
| Maggotflies were hairy, flying bugs that dropped their young on rotting carcasses, while feeding off the maggots left by other insects. If the adult Maggotfly was unable to deposit their young within the first few hours after their hatching, they would eat their parent, on which they rode. | | Maggotflies were hairy, flying bugs that dropped their young on rotting carcasses, while feeding off the maggots left by other insects. If the adult Maggotfly was unable to deposit their young within the first few hours after their hatching, they would eat their parent, on which they rode.<ref name="The World of Kong 70">{{cite book|title=[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island]]|author=Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop|date=22 November 2005|page=70|publisher=Pocket Star|isbn=978-1-4165-0519-8}}</ref> | ||
|- | |- | ||
! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Meat Weevil</h5>''' | ! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Meat Weevil</h5>''' | ||
| [[File:Meat Weevil.png|center|150px]] | | [[File:Meat Weevil.png|center|150px]] | ||
! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ||
| Meat Weevils were a species that laid eggs in carcasses that were so resilient that they survived being eaten by carrion feeders that hatched and emerged from the respective animal's dung. | | Meat Weevils were a species that laid eggs in carcasses that were so resilient that they survived being eaten by carrion feeders that hatched and emerged from the respective animal's dung.<ref name="The World of Kong 70">{{cite book|title=[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island]]|author=Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop|date=22 November 2005|page=70|publisher=Pocket Star|isbn=978-1-4165-0519-8}}</ref> | ||
|- | |- | ||
! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Carrion Centipede</h5>''' | ! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Carrion Centipede</h5>''' | ||
| [[File:Carrion Centipede.png|center|150px]] | | [[File:Carrion Centipede.png|center|150px]] | ||
! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ||
| Carrion Centipedes were carrion feeders that would remove meat from a carcass and bury it. | | Carrion Centipedes were carrion feeders that would remove meat from a carcass and bury it.<ref name="The World of Kong 70">{{cite book|title=[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island]]|author=Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop|date=22 November 2005|page=70|publisher=Pocket Star|isbn=978-1-4165-0519-8}}</ref> | ||
|- | |- | ||
! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Ornate Carrion Beetle</h5>''' | ! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Ornate Carrion Beetle</h5>''' | ||
| [[File:Ornate carrion beetle.png|center|150px]] | | [[File:Ornate carrion beetle.png|center|150px]] | ||
! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ||
| Ornate Carrion Beetles, in order to stake their claims at the rare and highly demanded unattended kills of Skull Island, evolved to smell carrion from miles around, and emit noxious chemicals from their brightly colored shells to deter other carrion organisms. The swarms of beetles could then stake an exclusive claim to the carcass. | | Ornate Carrion Beetles, in order to stake their claims at the rare and highly demanded unattended kills of Skull Island, evolved to smell carrion from miles around, and emit noxious chemicals from their brightly colored shells to deter other carrion organisms. The swarms of beetles could then stake an exclusive claim to the carcass.<ref name="The World of Kong 71">{{cite book|title=[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island]]|author=Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop|date=22 November 2005|page=71|publisher=Pocket Star|isbn=978-1-4165-0519-8}}</ref> | ||
|- | |- | ||
! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Nigracassida</h5>''' | ! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Nigracassida</h5>''' | ||
| [[File:Nigracassida.png|center|150px]] | | [[File:Nigracassida.png|center|150px]] | ||
! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ||
| Nigracassida dung beetles grew to three or four inches in length and specialized in harvesting the more than plentiful deposits of excrement on Skull Island and burying them for later consumption. They were preyed on by [[Skull Island reptiles|White Wedgeheads]], a species of lizard that evolved specifically to eat them. | | Nigracassida dung beetles grew to three or four inches in length and specialized in harvesting the more than plentiful deposits of excrement on Skull Island and burying them for later consumption. They were preyed on by [[Skull Island reptiles|White Wedgeheads]], a species of lizard that evolved specifically to eat them.<ref name="The World of Kong 72">{{cite book|title=[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island]]|author=Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop|date=22 November 2005|page=72|publisher=Pocket Star|isbn=978-1-4165-0519-8}}</ref> | ||
|- | |- | ||
! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Moonspider</h5>''' | ! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Moonspider</h5>''' | ||
| [[File:Moonspider.png|center|150px]] | | [[File:Moonspider.png|center|150px]] | ||
! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ||
| Moonspiders, a variety of the ten-legged Sunspiders, hunted at night to avoid being preyed upon by larger organisms. Their powerful jaws and paralytic venom made short work of the rodents, lizards, birds, and dinosaur chicks it fed on. Moonspiders adapted to pick up the scent of egg matter in the night, cluing the Moonspider in that a nest was hatching. The Moonspider then located the nest and would eat the hatchling dinosaurs. | | Moonspiders, a variety of the ten-legged Sunspiders, hunted at night to avoid being preyed upon by larger organisms. Their powerful jaws and paralytic venom made short work of the rodents, lizards, birds, and dinosaur chicks it fed on. Moonspiders adapted to pick up the scent of egg matter in the night, cluing the Moonspider in that a nest was hatching. The Moonspider then located the nest and would eat the hatchling dinosaurs.<ref name="The World of Kong 80">{{cite book|title=[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island]]|author=Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop|date=22 November 2005|page=80|publisher=Pocket Star|isbn=978-1-4165-0519-8}}</ref> | ||
|- | |- | ||
! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5> | ! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Estrivermus</h5>''' | ||
| [[File:Estrivimus.png|center|150px]] | | [[File:Estrivimus.png|center|150px]] | ||
! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ||
| Estrivermis were swamp-dwelling fifteen to twenty inch parasites that used their sharp, pointed mouths to burrow into blood vessels and attach themselves. The Estrivermis would then attach themselves and feed from the blood vessel for the rest of its life, with its tail still hanging outside, spewing excrement and eggs into the swamp waters. | | Estrivermis were swamp-dwelling fifteen to twenty inch parasites that used their sharp, pointed mouths to burrow into blood vessels and attach themselves. The Estrivermis would then attach themselves and feed from the blood vessel for the rest of its life, with its tail still hanging outside, spewing excrement and eggs into the swamp waters.<ref name="The World of Kong 91">{{cite book|title=[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island]]|author=Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop|date=22 November 2005|page=91|publisher=Pocket Star|isbn=978-1-4165-0519-8}}</ref> | ||
;Gallery | ;Gallery | ||
{{Collapse| | {{Collapse| | ||
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| [[File:Profanus.png|center|150px]] | | [[File:Profanus.png|center|150px]] | ||
! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ||
| Profanus were twenty to thirty inch long free-swimming tapeworms that burrowed through the skin of its prey to expose the flesh and deposit its eggs into the wound. The Profanus larvae then hatched and lived in the wound until they swam away to breed. | | Profanus were twenty to thirty inch long free-swimming tapeworms that burrowed through the skin of its prey to expose the flesh and deposit its eggs into the wound. The Profanus larvae then hatched and lived in the wound until they swam away to breed.<ref name="The World of Kong 91">{{cite book|title=[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island]]|author=Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop|date=22 November 2005|page=91|publisher=Pocket Star|isbn=978-1-4165-0519-8}}</ref> | ||
;Gallery | ;Gallery | ||
{{Collapse| | {{Collapse| | ||
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| [[File:Contereobestiolla.png|center|150px]] | | [[File:Contereobestiolla.png|center|150px]] | ||
! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ||
| Contereobestiolla lived as larvae in still freshwater until they were ingested by a fish. They then attached themselves to the fish's innards and pupated and lived in the gut as fully grown 1 to 3 inch arthropods that fed on swallowed food, and slowly multiplied inside the fish until they took over the entire digestive system. | | Contereobestiolla lived as larvae in still freshwater until they were ingested by a fish. They then attached themselves to the fish's innards and pupated and lived in the gut as fully grown 1 to 3 inch arthropods that fed on swallowed food, and slowly multiplied inside the fish until they took over the entire digestive system.<ref name="The World of Kong 91">{{cite book|title=[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island]]|author=Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop|date=22 November 2005|page=91|publisher=Pocket Star|isbn=978-1-4165-0519-8}}</ref> | ||
|- | |- | ||
! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Nepalacus</h5>''' | ! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Nepalacus</h5>''' | ||
| [[File:Nepalacus.png|center|150px]] | | [[File:Nepalacus.png|center|150px]] | ||
! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ||
| Nepalacus were aquatic neopedes, a Skull Island descendant of centipedes, that could grow to anywhere from eight to sixteen inches in length. They had webbed legs, making them agile swimmers, and there were many species with varying ranges of leg length and webbing patterns. | | Nepalacus were aquatic neopedes, a Skull Island descendant of centipedes, that could grow to anywhere from eight to sixteen inches in length. They had webbed legs, making them agile swimmers, and there were many species with varying ranges of leg length and webbing patterns.<ref name="The World of Kong 94">{{cite book|title=[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island]]|author=Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop|date=22 November 2005|page=94|publisher=Pocket Star|isbn=978-1-4165-0519-8}}</ref> | ||
|- | |- | ||
! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5> | ! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Aspiscimex</h5>''' | ||
| [[File:Aspicimex.png|center|150px]] | | [[File:Aspicimex.png|center|150px]] | ||
! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ||
| | | Aspiscimex were predatory neopedes with soft, flexible bodies that lived in Skull Island's swampland. Their hind-most legs were replaced by a flat tail, and their jaws were sharp and powerful, allowing them to prey on small fish. They grew up to eighteen to twenty-three inches in length.<ref name="The World of Kong 95">{{cite book|title=[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island]]|author=Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop|date=22 November 2005|page=95|publisher=Pocket Star|isbn=978-1-4165-0519-8}}</ref> | ||
|- | |- | ||
! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Hydruscimex</h5>''' | ! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Hydruscimex</h5>''' | ||
| [[File:Hydruscimex.png|center|150px]] | | [[File:Hydruscimex.png|center|150px]] | ||
! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ||
| Hydruscimex were the largest neopede at lengths ranging from nine to twelve feet. Its poison was not the most potent of the neopedes, but its size alone allowed it to inject lethal doses strong enough to down small dinosaurs. | | Hydruscimex were the largest neopede at lengths ranging from nine to twelve feet. Its poison was not the most potent of the neopedes, but its size alone allowed it to inject lethal doses strong enough to down small dinosaurs.<ref name="The World of Kong 95">{{cite book|title=[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island]]|author=Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop|date=22 November 2005|page=95|publisher=Pocket Star|isbn=978-1-4165-0519-8}}</ref> | ||
|- | |- | ||
! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Mortifillex</h5>''' | ! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Mortifillex</h5>''' | ||
| [[File:Mortifillex.png|center|150px]] | | [[File:Mortifillex.png|center|150px]] | ||
! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ||
| Mortifillex were three to four foot long aquatic bugs that used a hook-like lure to attract prey, and specially adapted mandible-like arms to inject nerve poison. | | Mortifillex were three to four foot long aquatic bugs that used a hook-like lure to attract prey, and specially adapted mandible-like arms to inject nerve poison.<ref name="The World of Kong 95">{{cite book|title=[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island]]|author=Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop|date=22 November 2005|page=95|publisher=Pocket Star|isbn=978-1-4165-0519-8}}</ref> | ||
|- | |- | ||
! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>[[Scorpio-pede]]</h5>''' | ! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>[[Scorpio-pede]]</h5>''' | ||
| [[File:Scorpio-pede.png|center|150px]] | | [[File:Scorpio-pede.png|center|150px]] | ||
! style="text-align:center" | ''[[King Kong (2005 film)|King Kong]]'' | ! style="text-align:center" | • ''[[King Kong (2005 film)|King Kong]]''<br> • ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ||
| {{Main|Scorpio-pede}}<br>Scorpio-pede were neopedes that lived in Skull Island's swamps. As larvae they were fully aquatic predators, but as adults they lived near the water and harvested algae from the rocks and trees. | | {{Main|Scorpio-pede}}<br>Scorpio-pede were neopedes that lived in Skull Island's swamps. As larvae they were fully aquatic predators, but as adults they lived near the water and harvested algae from the rocks and trees.<ref name="The World of Kong 96">{{cite book|title=[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island]]|author=Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop|date=22 November 2005|page=96|publisher=Pocket Star|isbn=978-1-4165-0519-8}}</ref> | ||
|- | |- | ||
! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Predatory Pond Skaters</h5>''' | ! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Predatory Pond Skaters</h5>''' | ||
| [[File:SI Pond skaters.png|center|150px]] | | [[File:SI Pond skaters.png|center|150px]] | ||
! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ||
| Predatory Pond Skaters were insects that skimmed the surface of Skull Island's still waters that sucked fluid out of their unsuspecting victims after locating them by homing in on the ripples they created on the water's surface. | | Predatory Pond Skaters were insects that skimmed the surface of Skull Island's still waters that sucked fluid out of their unsuspecting victims after locating them by homing in on the ripples they created on the water's surface.<ref name="The World of Kong 100">{{cite book|title=[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island]]|author=Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop|date=22 November 2005|page=100|publisher=Pocket Star|isbn=978-1-4165-0519-8}}</ref> | ||
|- | |- | ||
! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Mortaspis</h5>''' | ! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Mortaspis</h5>''' | ||
| [[File:Mortaspis.png|center|150px]] | | [[File:Mortaspis.png|center|150px]] | ||
! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ||
| Mortaspis were black and yellow relatives of the mosquito, that sucked blood in Skull Island's swamps. | | Mortaspis were black and yellow relatives of the mosquito, that sucked blood in Skull Island's swamps.<ref name="The World of Kong 101">{{cite book|title=[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island]]|author=Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop|date=22 November 2005|page=101|publisher=Pocket Star|isbn=978-1-4165-0519-8}}</ref> | ||
|- | |- | ||
! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Spinaculex</h5>''' | ! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Spinaculex</h5>''' | ||
| [[File:Spinaculex.png|center|150px]] | | [[File:Spinaculex.png|center|150px]] | ||
! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ! style="text-align:center" | • ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]''<br> • ''[[Journey to Skull Island]]'' | ||
| Spinaculex were two-inch-long, red, spined mosquitoes that had bulbous thoraxes that could expand to accommodate the blood they sucked. The constant drone of their wings was a constant annoyance to the young [[Ligocristus]] that lived in the swamps. | | Spinaculex were two-inch-long, red, spined mosquitoes that had bulbous thoraxes that could expand to accommodate the blood they sucked. The constant drone of their wings was a constant annoyance to the young [[Ligocristus]] that lived in the swamps.<ref name="The World of Kong 101">{{cite book|title=[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island]]|author=Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop|date=22 November 2005|page=101|publisher=Pocket Star|isbn=978-1-4165-0519-8}}</ref> | ||
|- | |- | ||
! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Megapede horridus</h5>''' | ! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Megapede horridus</h5>''' | ||
| [[File:Megapede horridus.png|center|150px]] | | [[File:Megapede horridus.png|center|150px]] | ||
! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ||
| Megapede horridus were three to four foot long centipedes that used their strong legs to grab their prey from the jungle floors before injecting their venom. | | Megapede horridus were three to four foot long centipedes that used their strong legs to grab their prey from the jungle floors before injecting their venom.<ref name="The World of Kong 159">{{cite book|title=[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island]]|author=Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop|date=22 November 2005|page=159|publisher=Pocket Star|isbn=978-1-4165-0519-8}}</ref> | ||
|- | |- | ||
! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Gyas</h5>''' | ! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Gyas</h5>''' | ||
| [[File:Gyas.png|center|150px]] | | [[File:Gyas.png|center|150px]] | ||
! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ||
| Gyas were twenty to thirty inch long centipedes that specialized in cracking eggshells from ground-nesting birds with their huge, scissor-like mandibles before drinking the escaping fluid. | | Gyas were twenty to thirty inch long centipedes that specialized in cracking eggshells from ground-nesting birds with their huge, scissor-like mandibles before drinking the escaping fluid.<ref name="The World of Kong 159">{{cite book|title=[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island]]|author=Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop|date=22 November 2005|page=159|publisher=Pocket Star|isbn=978-1-4165-0519-8}}</ref> | ||
|- | |- | ||
! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Megapede dereponecis</h5>''' | ! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Megapede dereponecis</h5>''' | ||
| [[File:Dereponecis.png|center|150px]] | | [[File:Dereponecis.png|center|150px]] | ||
! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ! style="text-align:center" | • ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]''<br> • ''[[Kong's Kingdom]]''<br> • ''[[Journey to Skull Island]]'' | ||
| Megapede dereponecis were three to five foot long centipedes, and were the largest to have ever lived. Because of this, they were too heavy to climb trees, and thus they hunted in their roots for hatchling dinosaurs which they immobilized with their venom. Females chewed tunnels into rotting logs and laid their eggs inside them. They then grew extremely territorial of the log and attacked anything that may have threatened their young. | | Megapede dereponecis were three to five foot long centipedes, and were the largest to have ever lived. Because of this, they were too heavy to climb trees, and thus they hunted in their roots for hatchling dinosaurs which they immobilized with their venom. Females chewed tunnels into rotting logs and laid their eggs inside them. They then grew extremely territorial of the log and attacked anything that may have threatened their young.<ref name="The World of Kong 159">{{cite book|title=[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island]]|author=Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop|date=22 November 2005|page=159|publisher=Pocket Star|isbn=978-1-4165-0519-8}}</ref> | ||
|- | |- | ||
! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Megapede humus</h5>''' | ! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Megapede humus</h5>''' | ||
| [[File:Humus.png|center|150px]] | | [[File:Humus.png|center|150px]] | ||
! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ||
| Megapede humus were twenty-six to forty inch long centipedes that used their large sets of front legs to burrow underground and eat rats and other bugs in their burrows. | | Megapede humus were twenty-six to forty inch long centipedes that used their large sets of front legs to burrow underground and eat rats and other bugs in their burrows.<ref name="The World of Kong 159">{{cite book|title=[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island]]|author=Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop|date=22 November 2005|page=159|publisher=Pocket Star|isbn=978-1-4165-0519-8}}</ref> | ||
|- | |- | ||
! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Stickalithus</h5>''' | ! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Stickalithus</h5>''' | ||
| [[File:Stickalithus.png|center|150px]] | | [[File:Stickalithus.png|center|150px]] | ||
! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ||
| Stickalithus were eight to twelve foot long spiders that ate man-sized [[Skull Island Birds and Fish|carnivorous birds]] and dinosaurs. Being too large to spin an intricate web, Stickalithus instead used their silk to create a nursery for their young. To capture prey, it waited in the low branches and foliage to hide itself and dropped down to drain its prey, whose empty husks littered the ground beneath its roost. | | Stickalithus were eight to twelve foot long spiders that ate man-sized [[Skull Island Birds and Fish|carnivorous birds]] and dinosaurs. Being too large to spin an intricate web, Stickalithus instead used their silk to create a nursery for their young. To capture prey, it waited in the low branches and foliage to hide itself and dropped down to drain its prey, whose empty husks littered the ground beneath its roost.<ref name="The World of Kong 163">{{cite book|title=[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island]]|author=Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop|date=22 November 2005|page=163|publisher=Pocket Star|isbn=978-1-4165-0519-8}}</ref> | ||
|- | |- | ||
! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Wicked Weaver</h5>''' | ! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Wicked Weaver</h5>''' | ||
Line 171: | Line 176: | ||
| [[File:Illotus.png|center|150px]] | | [[File:Illotus.png|center|150px]] | ||
! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ||
| Idolon illotus were slim and fast predatorial centipedes that lived in the jungle canopy and hunted for flizards. Its venom could kill prey within moments of a bite. They could grow to sizes ranging from ten to fourteen inches. | | Idolon illotus were slim and fast predatorial centipedes that lived in the jungle canopy and hunted for flizards. Its venom could kill prey within moments of a bite. They could grow to sizes ranging from ten to fourteen inches.<ref name="The World of Kong 169">{{cite book|title=[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island]]|author=Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop|date=22 November 2005|page=169|publisher=Pocket Star|isbn=978-1-4165-0519-8}}</ref> | ||
|- | |- | ||
! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Idolon venefaucus</h5>''' | ! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Idolon venefaucus</h5>''' | ||
Line 194: | Line 199: | ||
|- | |- | ||
! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Unguasilus</h5>''' | ! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Unguasilus</h5>''' | ||
| [[File:Unguasilus.png|center|150px]] | | [[File:Unguasilus 2.png|center|150px]] | ||
! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ! style="text-align:center" | • ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]''<br> • ''[[Kong's Kingdom]]''<br> • ''[[Journey to Skull Island]]'' | ||
| Unguasilus were bugs that sacrificed themselves for their young, a trait not commonly found in insects. Females laid parasitic eggs on their mate's thorax. The eggs then drained their father for nutrition through his porous exoskeleton. On hatching, the larvae slowly ate their father alive until they pupated in his dry husk and emerge as miniature versions of the fully grown wasp. | | Unguasilus were bugs that sacrificed themselves for their young, a trait not commonly found in insects. Females laid parasitic eggs on their mate's thorax. The eggs then drained their father for nutrition through his porous exoskeleton. On hatching, the larvae slowly ate their father alive until they pupated in his dry husk and emerge as miniature versions of the fully grown wasp. | ||
;Gallery | |||
{{Collapse| | |||
<gallery widths='120' position='center' captionalign='center' spacing='small'> | |||
Unguasilus 2.png | |||
Unguasilus.png|''Unguasilus'' larvae feeding on the adult | |||
</gallery> | |||
}} | |||
|- | |- | ||
! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Decarnocimex</h5>''' | ! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Decarnocimex</h5>''' | ||
Line 205: | Line 217: | ||
! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>[[Weta-rex]]</h5>''' | ! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>[[Weta-rex]]</h5>''' | ||
| [[File:Weta-rex.png|center|150px]] | | [[File:Weta-rex.png|center|150px]] | ||
! style="text-align:center" | ''[[King Kong (2005 film)|King Kong]]'' | ! style="text-align:center" | • ''[[King Kong (2005 film)|King Kong]]''<br> • ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ||
| {{Main|Weta-rex}}<br>Weta-rex were two to three foot long relatives of the Wetas of New Zealand, however unlike those, the Weta-rex were ferocious carnivores. Using their shear-like mandibles, the swarms of Weta-rexes could easily down an adult dinosaur. | | {{Main|Weta-rex}}<br>Weta-rex were two to three foot long relatives of the Wetas of New Zealand, however unlike those, the Weta-rex were ferocious carnivores. Using their shear-like mandibles, the swarms of Weta-rexes could easily down an adult dinosaur. | ||
|- | |- | ||
! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>[[Arachno-claw]]</h5>''' | ! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>[[Arachno-claw]]</h5>''' | ||
| [[File:Arachno-claw.png|center|150px]] | | [[File:Arachno-claw.png|center|150px]] | ||
! style="text-align:center" | ''[[King Kong (2005 film)|King Kong]]'' | ! style="text-align:center" | • ''[[King Kong (2005 film)|King Kong]]''<br> • ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ||
| {{Main|Arachno-claw}}<br>Aracho-claw spiders were four to six feet in size. They laid their microscopic eggs in carrion of the chasm floor, but most were either eaten by carrion eaters, or drowned in the slime that coated the pit's bottom. They were then ingested by [[Carnictis]], in the guts of which they pupated and lived as stomach parasites until they pupated and emerged from the rectum as miniature adults. | | {{Main|Arachno-claw}}<br>Aracho-claw spiders were four to six feet in size. They laid their microscopic eggs in carrion of the chasm floor, but most were either eaten by carrion eaters, or drowned in the slime that coated the pit's bottom. They were then ingested by [[Carnictis]], in the guts of which they pupated and lived as stomach parasites until they pupated and emerged from the rectum as miniature adults. | ||
|- | |- | ||
Line 217: | Line 229: | ||
! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ! style="text-align:center" | ''[[The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island|The World of Kong]]'' | ||
| Megapede impurus lived in the filth below [[Terapusmordax]] colonies. The nearly three foot long centipedes fed on infant Terapusmordax that fell from the ceiling, and would strike before they could crawl back up, assuming they had not died or sustained a horrible injury. | | Megapede impurus lived in the filth below [[Terapusmordax]] colonies. The nearly three foot long centipedes fed on infant Terapusmordax that fell from the ceiling, and would strike before they could crawl back up, assuming they had not died or sustained a horrible injury. | ||
|- | |||
! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Unnamed spider</h5>''' | |||
| [[File:Test Image.png|center|150px]] | |||
! style="text-align:center" | [[King Kong (2005 novelization)|''King Kong'' (novelization)]] | |||
| While hiding from predators in a hollow beneath a tree, [[Ann Darrow]] was approached by a spider with hairy legs that were two feet long. It had only just begun to feel around on her leg when she fled from the scene in terror.<ref name="King Kong (novelization) 279">{{cite book|title= King Kong|author= Christopher Golden|date= 2005|publisher= Pocket Star Books|page= 279|pages= |isbn= 1416503919}}</ref> Perhaps upset by the noise, several giant spiders, possibly of the same species encountered by Darrow, swarmed out of the cracks in the cliff walls as [[Bruce Baxter]] fired down at the bugs in the pit below to save the crew of the ''Venture''.<ref name="King Kong (novelization) 298">{{cite book|title= King Kong|author= Christopher Golden|date= 2005|publisher= Pocket Star Books|page= 298|pages= |isbn= 1416503919}}</ref> | |||
|- | |||
! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Giant dragonfly</h5>''' | |||
| [[File:Test Image.png|center|150px]] | |||
! style="text-align:center" | [[King Kong (2005 novelization)|''King Kong'' (novelization)]] | |||
| A type of gigantic dragonfly-like bugs with a wasp-like thorax were present when the surviving members of the crew of the ''Venture'' were rescued by Bruce Baxter. Several of the dragonfly creatures were blasted apart during this operation.<ref name="King Kong (novelization) 299">{{cite book|title= King Kong|author= Christopher Golden|date= 2005|publisher= Pocket Star Books|page= 299|pages= |isbn= 1416503919}}</ref> | |||
|} | |} | ||
==MonsterVerse | |||
==[[MonsterVerse]]== | |||
{| class="wikitable plainrowheaders sortable" style="width:auto%;" | {| class="wikitable plainrowheaders sortable" style="width:auto%;" | ||
|- | |- | ||
Line 240: | Line 263: | ||
! style="text-align:center" | ''[[Skull Island: The Birth of Kong]]'' | ! style="text-align:center" | ''[[Skull Island: The Birth of Kong]]'' | ||
| {{Main|Swamp Locust}}<br>The Swamp Locust is a species of enormous aquatic insect that hunts by submerging its body before entrapping prey with its long legs. | | {{Main|Swamp Locust}}<br>The Swamp Locust is a species of enormous aquatic insect that hunts by submerging its body before entrapping prey with its long legs. | ||
|- | |||
! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Giant ants</h5>''' | |||
| [[File:Test Image.png|center|150px]] | |||
! style="text-align:center" | ''[[Kong: Skull Island]]'' | |||
| [[Hank Marlow]] pointed out to [[Houston Brooks]] and [[Lin San]] that the bird-like calls coming from the jungle were actually produced by gigantic ants that lived in the trees, though the creatures were not seen. | |||
|- | |||
! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>Giant wasp</h5>''' | |||
| [[File:Test Image.png|center|150px]] | |||
! style="text-align:center" | ''[[Kong: Skull Island - The Official Movie Novelization]]'' | |||
| During their expedition through the island, Conrad's party encountered a carnivorous plant with several dead animals inside its maw, including a wasp the size of Weaver’s hand. | |||
|- | |||
! scope="row" rowspan="1" style="font-size:95%" | '''<h5>[[Vinestrangler]]</h5>''' | |||
| [[File:Vinestrangler_1.PNG.png|center|150px]] | |||
! style="text-align:center" | ''Skull Island: Archives''<br>'' | |||
| {{Main|Vinestrangler}}<br>The Vinestrangler is a slender insect which uses dozens of tentacles to drag prey into its massive maw. | |||
|} | |} | ||
Line 276: | Line 314: | ||
|} | |} | ||
==Kong Reborn== | ==''[[Kong Reborn]]''== | ||
{| class="wikitable plainrowheaders sortable" style="width:auto%;" | {| class="wikitable plainrowheaders sortable" style="width:auto%;" | ||
|- | |- | ||
Line 313: | Line 351: | ||
*[[Skull Island mammals]] | *[[Skull Island mammals]] | ||
*[[Skull Island reptiles]] | *[[Skull Island reptiles]] | ||
{{Comments}} | |||
{{Era|RKO|UNI|MV|KAI}} | {{Era|RKO|UNI|MV|KAI}} | ||
[[Category:King Kong Monsters]] | [[Category:King Kong Monsters]] |
Revision as of 03:12, 28 July 2019
This article is a work in progress. Please help in the creation of this article by expanding or improving it. |
“
|
Mosquito nets here are useless - better to use barb wire and sentries
|
„
|
— Unknown, Fall expedition to Skull Island, 1936 (The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island) |
The following is a list of bugs and arachnids living on Skull Island across the various continuities and stories featuring King Kong.
Press Ctrl+F
on Windows or Cmd+F
on Mac to look for a specific monster.
RKO
Name | Image | Appearance(s) | Description |
---|---|---|---|
Great Spider |
King Kong (1932), "The Lost Spider Pit Sequence" |
| |
Octopus-Insect |
King Kong (1932), "The Lost Spider Pit Sequence" |
| |
Crab creature |
"The Lost Spider Pit Sequence" (2010) | A creature somewhere between a crab and a spider was intended to appear in the original film, but the sequence in which they appeared was cut and has since been lost to time. However, one appeared in Peter Jackson's recreation of the scene, in which it attacked and ate one of the Venture's sailors |
Universal
Name | Image | Appearance(s) | Description |
---|---|---|---|
Skull Island Termites |
The World of Kong | Skull Island's Termites were divided into three castes. The winged variety left the mound to breed, and the two soldier classes protected it. The spade-shaped variety had powerful jaws, and the narrow-headed variety could spit noxious chemicals to ward away attackers. The termites were known to make enormous termitaries that could rival the island's dinosaurs in size. Some dinosaurs like Ferrucutus used the termites to combat dermal parasites by brushing up on the mounds and allowing the termites to kill anything unwelcome, while its own hide kept the dinosaur from harm.[1]Their larvae were a favorite source of protein for the Calcarisaurus.[2] | |
Scissor-Beetle |
The World of Kong | Scissor-Beetles were blood-seeking flightless carrion insects that used grasshopper-like legs to hop to prey, where they used their blade-like mandibles to cut off chunks of meat.[3] | |
Maggotfly |
The World of Kong | Maggotflies were hairy, flying bugs that dropped their young on rotting carcasses, while feeding off the maggots left by other insects. If the adult Maggotfly was unable to deposit their young within the first few hours after their hatching, they would eat their parent, on which they rode.[3] | |
Meat Weevil |
The World of Kong | Meat Weevils were a species that laid eggs in carcasses that were so resilient that they survived being eaten by carrion feeders that hatched and emerged from the respective animal's dung.[3] | |
Carrion Centipede |
The World of Kong | Carrion Centipedes were carrion feeders that would remove meat from a carcass and bury it.[3] | |
Ornate Carrion Beetle |
The World of Kong | Ornate Carrion Beetles, in order to stake their claims at the rare and highly demanded unattended kills of Skull Island, evolved to smell carrion from miles around, and emit noxious chemicals from their brightly colored shells to deter other carrion organisms. The swarms of beetles could then stake an exclusive claim to the carcass.[4] | |
Nigracassida |
The World of Kong | Nigracassida dung beetles grew to three or four inches in length and specialized in harvesting the more than plentiful deposits of excrement on Skull Island and burying them for later consumption. They were preyed on by White Wedgeheads, a species of lizard that evolved specifically to eat them.[5] | |
Moonspider |
The World of Kong | Moonspiders, a variety of the ten-legged Sunspiders, hunted at night to avoid being preyed upon by larger organisms. Their powerful jaws and paralytic venom made short work of the rodents, lizards, birds, and dinosaur chicks it fed on. Moonspiders adapted to pick up the scent of egg matter in the night, cluing the Moonspider in that a nest was hatching. The Moonspider then located the nest and would eat the hatchling dinosaurs.[6] | |
Estrivermus |
The World of Kong | Estrivermis were swamp-dwelling fifteen to twenty inch parasites that used their sharp, pointed mouths to burrow into blood vessels and attach themselves. The Estrivermis would then attach themselves and feed from the blood vessel for the rest of its life, with its tail still hanging outside, spewing excrement and eggs into the swamp waters.[7]
| |
Profanus |
The World of Kong | Profanus were twenty to thirty inch long free-swimming tapeworms that burrowed through the skin of its prey to expose the flesh and deposit its eggs into the wound. The Profanus larvae then hatched and lived in the wound until they swam away to breed.[7]
| |
Contereobestiolla |
The World of Kong | Contereobestiolla lived as larvae in still freshwater until they were ingested by a fish. They then attached themselves to the fish's innards and pupated and lived in the gut as fully grown 1 to 3 inch arthropods that fed on swallowed food, and slowly multiplied inside the fish until they took over the entire digestive system.[7] | |
Nepalacus |
The World of Kong | Nepalacus were aquatic neopedes, a Skull Island descendant of centipedes, that could grow to anywhere from eight to sixteen inches in length. They had webbed legs, making them agile swimmers, and there were many species with varying ranges of leg length and webbing patterns.[8] | |
Aspiscimex |
The World of Kong | Aspiscimex were predatory neopedes with soft, flexible bodies that lived in Skull Island's swampland. Their hind-most legs were replaced by a flat tail, and their jaws were sharp and powerful, allowing them to prey on small fish. They grew up to eighteen to twenty-three inches in length.[9] | |
Hydruscimex |
The World of Kong | Hydruscimex were the largest neopede at lengths ranging from nine to twelve feet. Its poison was not the most potent of the neopedes, but its size alone allowed it to inject lethal doses strong enough to down small dinosaurs.[9] | |
Mortifillex |
The World of Kong | Mortifillex were three to four foot long aquatic bugs that used a hook-like lure to attract prey, and specially adapted mandible-like arms to inject nerve poison.[9] | |
Scorpio-pede |
• King Kong • The World of Kong |
| |
Predatory Pond Skaters |
The World of Kong | Predatory Pond Skaters were insects that skimmed the surface of Skull Island's still waters that sucked fluid out of their unsuspecting victims after locating them by homing in on the ripples they created on the water's surface.[11] | |
Mortaspis |
The World of Kong | Mortaspis were black and yellow relatives of the mosquito, that sucked blood in Skull Island's swamps.[12] | |
Spinaculex |
• The World of Kong • Journey to Skull Island |
Spinaculex were two-inch-long, red, spined mosquitoes that had bulbous thoraxes that could expand to accommodate the blood they sucked. The constant drone of their wings was a constant annoyance to the young Ligocristus that lived in the swamps.[12] | |
Megapede horridus |
The World of Kong | Megapede horridus were three to four foot long centipedes that used their strong legs to grab their prey from the jungle floors before injecting their venom.[13] | |
Gyas |
The World of Kong | Gyas were twenty to thirty inch long centipedes that specialized in cracking eggshells from ground-nesting birds with their huge, scissor-like mandibles before drinking the escaping fluid.[13] | |
Megapede dereponecis |
• The World of Kong • Kong's Kingdom • Journey to Skull Island |
Megapede dereponecis were three to five foot long centipedes, and were the largest to have ever lived. Because of this, they were too heavy to climb trees, and thus they hunted in their roots for hatchling dinosaurs which they immobilized with their venom. Females chewed tunnels into rotting logs and laid their eggs inside them. They then grew extremely territorial of the log and attacked anything that may have threatened their young.[13] | |
Megapede humus |
The World of Kong | Megapede humus were twenty-six to forty inch long centipedes that used their large sets of front legs to burrow underground and eat rats and other bugs in their burrows.[13] | |
Stickalithus |
The World of Kong | Stickalithus were eight to twelve foot long spiders that ate man-sized carnivorous birds and dinosaurs. Being too large to spin an intricate web, Stickalithus instead used their silk to create a nursery for their young. To capture prey, it waited in the low branches and foliage to hide itself and dropped down to drain its prey, whose empty husks littered the ground beneath its roost.[14] | |
Wicked Weaver |
The World of Kong | Wicked Weavers were four to six inch long spiders that spun thin webs to ensnare small birds, insects, and some flying lizards. While some prey was large enough to break free and fall to the jungle floor, the Wicked Weaver's venom quickly immobilized prey and minimized their chance of escape. | |
Idolon illotus |
The World of Kong | Idolon illotus were slim and fast predatorial centipedes that lived in the jungle canopy and hunted for flizards. Its venom could kill prey within moments of a bite. They could grow to sizes ranging from ten to fourteen inches.[15] | |
Idolon venefaucus |
The World of Kong | Idolon venefaucus lived in the dense leaves and vines to ambush their prey. Their grey coloring served to camouflage their 20 to 24 inch long bodies from predators and prey. The Skull Island Hornbill was immune to their specific venom. | |
Omnimatercimex harpeforceps |
The World of Kong | Omnimatercimex harpeforceps, ranging from 30 to 35 inches in length, were the largest of the tree-dwelling Skull Island centipedes. They preyed primarily on baby birds and dinosaurs. They had the unique trait of eating a hole into their meal, and lining it with their scent to warn off carrion hunters and ate their meal whole from the inside out. Baby dinosaurs could feed Omnimatercimex for weeks. | |
Canopy Insects |
The World of Kong | The Canopy Insects of Skull Island lived in many different ways, ranging from colony dwellers, to lone insects that were as individually adapted as one might find in any other ecosystem, however there is no data of their individual behaviors provided. | |
Noxmuscus |
The World of Kong | Noxmuscus were predators that chose to prey primarily on the Sap Snails of Skull Island, which fed, as their name suggests, on tree sap. The Noxmuscus had developed strong, flat proboscis to pry the snails from trees and to allow them to drop to the jungle floor, where they would jab it into the soft flesh and drink the snail's insides. | |
Unguasilus |
• The World of Kong • Kong's Kingdom • Journey to Skull Island |
Unguasilus were bugs that sacrificed themselves for their young, a trait not commonly found in insects. Females laid parasitic eggs on their mate's thorax. The eggs then drained their father for nutrition through his porous exoskeleton. On hatching, the larvae slowly ate their father alive until they pupated in his dry husk and emerge as miniature versions of the fully grown wasp.
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Decarnocimex |
The World of Kong | Decarnocimex were five to ten foot long carnivorous relatives of crickets that lived in the chasm depths of Skull Island and was famous for tearing prey apart with its bladed forelimbs. Females dragged the carcasses of small animals that fell into their domain into holes dug into the chasm walls where they laid their eggs. They then sealed themselves in with a cement-like mucus. The young would them feed on the meat until they were old enough to eat their way out of the nursery. | |
Weta-rex |
• King Kong • The World of Kong |
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Arachno-claw |
• King Kong • The World of Kong |
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Megapede impurus |
The World of Kong | Megapede impurus lived in the filth below Terapusmordax colonies. The nearly three foot long centipedes fed on infant Terapusmordax that fell from the ceiling, and would strike before they could crawl back up, assuming they had not died or sustained a horrible injury. | |
Unnamed spider |
King Kong (novelization) | While hiding from predators in a hollow beneath a tree, Ann Darrow was approached by a spider with hairy legs that were two feet long. It had only just begun to feel around on her leg when she fled from the scene in terror.[16] Perhaps upset by the noise, several giant spiders, possibly of the same species encountered by Darrow, swarmed out of the cracks in the cliff walls as Bruce Baxter fired down at the bugs in the pit below to save the crew of the Venture.[17] | |
Giant dragonfly |
King Kong (novelization) | A type of gigantic dragonfly-like bugs with a wasp-like thorax were present when the surviving members of the crew of the Venture were rescued by Bruce Baxter. Several of the dragonfly creatures were blasted apart during this operation.[18] |
MonsterVerse
Name | Image | Appearance(s) | Description |
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Mother Longlegs |
Kong: Skull Island, Skull Island: The Birth of Kong |
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Spore Mantis |
Kong: Skull Island |
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Swamp Locust |
Skull Island: The Birth of Kong |
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Giant ants |
Kong: Skull Island | Hank Marlow pointed out to Houston Brooks and Lin San that the bird-like calls coming from the jungle were actually produced by gigantic ants that lived in the trees, though the creatures were not seen. | |
Giant wasp |
Kong: Skull Island - The Official Movie Novelization | During their expedition through the island, Conrad's party encountered a carnivorous plant with several dead animals inside its maw, including a wasp the size of Weaver’s hand. | |
Vinestrangler |
Skull Island: Archives |
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Kong of Skull Island
Name | Image | Appearance(s) | Description |
---|---|---|---|
Giant spider |
Kong of Skull Island (2016-17) | While confronting Ewata in the jungle, Queen Usana of the Tagatu was nearly attacked by a giant spider, which Ewata skewered before it could cause her harm. | |
Unnamed giant centipede |
Kong: Gods of Skull Island (2017) | While Captain Cooper and his four remaining crewmen of the 1912 Conrad expedition to Skull Island was being chased through the jungle by Kong, a giant purple centipede with many red eyes leaped out of the jungle and ate one of the sailors. | |
Giant worm |
Kong: Gods of Skull Island (2017) | In Bar-Atu's Kong religion, there is a tale of Kong's youth stating that when Kong was young, he was kidnapped by a giant worm from the center of the Earth, and rescued by his mother with whom he helped to kill the worm and liberate its followers. | |
Giant mosquitoes |
Kong: Gods of Skull Island (2017) | A swarm of gigantic mosquitoes attacked Conrad and his missionaries as they trekked through the jungle. | |
Giant locust |
Kong on the Planet of the Apes (2018) | While stationed on Skull Island, some gorilla troops killed a gigantic locust-like creature. |
Kong Reborn
Name | Image | Appearance(s) | Description |
---|---|---|---|
Purple Fly |
Kong Reborn | A species of purple flies inhabited the coastal regions of Skull Island. They were far larger than a housefly, but by no means monstrous. Their bodies were purple in hue. | |
White Spider |
Kong Reborn | A species of thick-legged white spiders about two feet across inhabited the jungles, and spun webs across well-traveled paths to snare passing creatures. | |
Giant Centipede |
Kong Reborn | 30-inch long creatures resembling giant centipedes were a common sight in the jungle. They could be seen feeding on carrion. | |
Goliath Fly |
Kong Reborn | Goliath Flies were a species of fly of a size comparable to a Goliath beetle. | |
Flat Beetle |
Kong Reborn | A species of roach-like flat beetles could be seen crawling on the island's trees. One specimen was blown to bits by a commando who was spooked by the sight of it. |
See Also
Comments
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- ↑ Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop (22 November 2005). The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island. Pocket Star. p. 58,59. ISBN 978-1-4165-0519-8.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
- ↑ Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop (22 November 2005). The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island. Pocket Star. p. 61. ISBN 978-1-4165-0519-8.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop (22 November 2005). The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island. Pocket Star. p. 70. ISBN 978-1-4165-0519-8.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
- ↑ Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop (22 November 2005). The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island. Pocket Star. p. 71. ISBN 978-1-4165-0519-8.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
- ↑ Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop (22 November 2005). The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island. Pocket Star. p. 72. ISBN 978-1-4165-0519-8.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
- ↑ Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop (22 November 2005). The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island. Pocket Star. p. 80. ISBN 978-1-4165-0519-8.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 7.2 Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop (22 November 2005). The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island. Pocket Star. p. 91. ISBN 978-1-4165-0519-8.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
- ↑ Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop (22 November 2005). The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island. Pocket Star. p. 94. ISBN 978-1-4165-0519-8.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 9.2 Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop (22 November 2005). The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island. Pocket Star. p. 95. ISBN 978-1-4165-0519-8.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
- ↑ Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop (22 November 2005). The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island. Pocket Star. p. 96. ISBN 978-1-4165-0519-8.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
- ↑ Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop (22 November 2005). The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island. Pocket Star. p. 100. ISBN 978-1-4165-0519-8.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
- ↑ 12.0 12.1 Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop (22 November 2005). The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island. Pocket Star. p. 101. ISBN 978-1-4165-0519-8.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
- ↑ 13.0 13.1 13.2 13.3 Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop (22 November 2005). The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island. Pocket Star. p. 159. ISBN 978-1-4165-0519-8.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
- ↑ Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop (22 November 2005). The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island. Pocket Star. p. 163. ISBN 978-1-4165-0519-8.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
- ↑ Falconer, Daniel, Weta Workshop (22 November 2005). The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island. Pocket Star. p. 169. ISBN 978-1-4165-0519-8.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
- ↑ Christopher Golden (2005). King Kong. Pocket Star Books. p. 279. ISBN 1416503919.
- ↑ Christopher Golden (2005). King Kong. Pocket Star Books. p. 298. ISBN 1416503919.
- ↑ Christopher Golden (2005). King Kong. Pocket Star Books. p. 299. ISBN 1416503919.