SolseedsSubcladesCeresians
Ceresians

Parent Clade: Dustborn
Primary Habitats: Ceres, Pallas
Summary: A Dustborn subclade adapted to low-gravity, high-particulate environments with electrostatic dust management and bone-density regulation.

Ceresians

Overview

Ceresians exist because dust doesn’t behave normally in low gravity.

On Ceres and Pallas:

  • Dust remains suspended
  • Electrostatic charge dominates behavior

Traditional filtration fails.

Ceresians were designed to manage dust at both environmental and biological levels.

Structural Adaptations

Bone Density Regulation

They maintain:

  • Lower baseline bone density
  • Active remodeling systems

This prevents:

  • Long-term degradation in low gravity
  • Structural weakness over time

Dermal Adaptations

Electrostatic Dissipation

Their skin:

  • Reduces charge buildup
  • Minimizes dust adhesion

This is achieved through:

  • Conductive surface proteins
  • Controlled moisture layers

Respiratory Adaptations

Fine Particulate Filtering

Similar to Hollowers, but adapted for:

  • Suspended, charged particles

Filtration systems emphasize:

  • Electrostatic capture
  • Mucosal binding

External Presentation

Typical traits:

  • Slightly elongated limbs
  • Smooth skin with low dust accumulation
  • Controlled, efficient movement in low gravity

Development History

Originated in asteroid habitation programs.

Challenges included:

  • Persistent airborne dust
  • Structural degradation in low gravity

Adaptations combined:

  • Dust management
  • Skeletal regulation

Environmental Tradeoffs

In higher gravity:

  • Movement becomes more taxing
  • Bone density must increase

Psychologically:

  • Strong preference for low-gravity environments

They are not fragile. They’re just not built for heavier Worlds.

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