Chapter 133: Purpose

The more you know, the more questions you have.

It's an interesting phrase in my thoughts, and Lynn is a big believer in it.

Lynn looked at a series of statues that seemed to illustrate the evolutionary history of the Inca swarm, which described a worm slowly evolving into a parasitic organism, and then invading the brains of other creatures, causing the creature to produce various mutations, some of the creatures that became abnormal died, but some of the creatures that produced favorable mutations survived, and the worms continued to hunt for themselves and obtain nutrients, and eventually these worms lived together and completely merged with the parasitic mutant host, and then they formed a new species.

This evolutionary way, while wonderful, is not entirely impossible.

Lin has seen the effects of many parasites on the host, and after they squeeze in, they do sometimes damage the host's cell division mechanism, leading the host to grow an extra arthropod or something, or there are some long-term effects, such as the host will produce a large number of immune cells to attack the parasite, and even change the structure of the body, which will have a great impact on the future evolution of the organism.

It can be said that the current creatures have this appearance, and it has a lot to do with parasites and viruses.

However, the Inca swarms are more powerful, they directly affect the brains of living beings, and although the statues cannot be revealed, Lin thinks that they may also release some information to interfere with the growth of living beings, causing strange cell divisions of living beings.

If a useless deformed mutation is generated, the host will die, and the worm will find the next target, and the useful mutation will be generated, and the worm will continue to use the host.

It may take tens of thousands of parasites to produce a useful mutation. But that's obviously not a problem.

In addition, worms will also control the activities of the host through the guò brain, and so on.

The worm at this time is very much like Lynn's brain reader. But the question is, how do worms have these abilities? The statue depicting the evolution of the worm is actually incomplete. It only describes the worm's morphological growth step by step, but it does not describe how it knows how to parasitize into the brain, as if it suddenly knows how to control the brain......

Although it didn't take long for Lin to create a brain reader, the evolution of other creatures is not the same thing as Lin, and the most important thing is the opportunity.

A chance chance determines what happens to a creature, not something that can be done with a thought like Lynn does.

How did this worm come up with the opportunity to parasitize the brain? Maybe they were just ordinary parasites that got close to the brain by accident, anyway. This part of the Inca swarm is not fully studied.

The next route is clearer, the worm should be able to distinguish which of the other organisms is parasitized by the same kind, and then they gather together to live together and develop into a complete division of labor, because they start differently, so the process is a little faster than the usual division of labor.

In addition, Lynn found a number of other statues that depicted the process by which some of the Inca swarms changed their classes, basically the process by which these ordinary creatures were transformed beyond recognition by parasitic worms.

It seems that the Inca swarm was originally obtained by parasitism, but after that, they were directly extracted from the target's cell information and produced.

'Fat Worm' is not a parasitic class. Rather, it is a change from the original worm, but there is no detailed process in it. The statues of the Inca swarm only describe their slow change of form, but since their parasitic and influencing abilities are so strong, it is not surprising that they have such abilities.

It's interesting, it's a very special way of evolving, but how did the Inca swarm discover its evolutionary history? Lynn believes that their brains began to develop at a later stage, which means that the Inca swarms may have discovered their own history by digging up fossils and so on.

Although fossils may not be as detailed as they are known, they still have ways to extract cellular information to help, and it is not difficult to study their own evolutionary history.

However, there is a problem with the Inca swarm.

They don't have 'head bugs'.

Although they have a division of labor, they do not have a class that symbolizes the general existence of the brain, each combat and non-combat class of the Inca insect swarm has a certain ability to think, they do not let a certain class specialize in a huge brain, if you want to talk about a single class, the intelligence is much worse than the Montezuma of the Aztec worm, but on the whole, their intelligence is even higher than that of the Mayan group of brain worms.

It's a peculiar phenomenon, and although they all have brains with each other, they work together perfectly, they don't need any command or anything like that, and they can send messages to each other.

And they are obviously very thoughtful, and like to record their research, and they also make all kinds of statues.

In times of war, their thoughts were also very interesting, just like now, Lynn didn't know why they ran into the tunnels in the middle of the pit, and she didn't know why they showed these things to Lynn.

In general, you shouldn't show your own things to hostile mobs, as this will only give your opponent a way to defeat you.

If it were Lynn, she would have destroyed all of the research records before the enemy army came in, without giving them any information about herself.

However, Lin doubts that the Inca swarm has never been here, almost none of the Inca swarm troops have the ability to live underwater, their breathing structure cannot live underwater, and it is estimated that they have been out of the water for a long time, so when they catch fish, they will make a net of silk threads to fish, instead of catching them directly.

'Gollum ......'

Lynn heard a sound and a large creature swimming.

There are some creatures here, but they are all snails and small trilobites.

The sounder made a small sound, much more powerful underwater than on land, and Lynn knew the creature's shape in an instant.

This is...... What creature does Lynn know? And it's actually one of the Inca swarm troops.

It's a Shadow Monster.

According to the statue, the Shadow Monsters are a species of fish, and they are indeed one of the few species that can live underwater in the Inca swarm.

Lynn had only spotted one Shadow Monster, and did they think that alone would be able to defeat Lynn's hundreds of Sounders?

And this shadow monster didn't actually hide, but swam directly to the sounders.

It doesn't seem to have any intention of attacking?

"Ga ......"

Just as Lin was wondering, the shadow monsters suddenly made a sound, and this time Lin actually realized that they were using the vocabulary of the head bug.

It seems that she has just learned it, and the pronunciation is strange and intermittent, but Lynn still understands it.

The Shadow Monster's words were, "We, go." (To be continued......)