Alpha Ray Species

| Attribute | Details |
|---|---|
| Age | Several millions of years old |
| Status | Extinct (Has four living descendants) |
| Descendants | Ghostray, Jellyray, Rabbit Ray, Crimson Ray |
The Alpha Ray species is the hypothesised common ancestor of the four living ray species on the planet today: the Jellyray, Rabbit Ray, Ghostray, and Crimson Ray.
The data bank entry for this creature is obtained after all four living rays have been scanned or by going to the Disease Research Facility and scanning the display that has the rays in it.
Appearance
The entry for the Alpha Ray species states that it would have shared the forward-mounted eyes of the Ghostray and Crimson Ray, as befits a predatory creature. It would also have been similar in size to a Ghostray and likely shared the translucent skin.
Data Bank Entry
Ray Species on 4546B
Different species of ray indigenous to 4546B, each adapted to different environments. The specimens are 99.99% genetically identical to those encountered on the planet today, suggesting that rays in particular have undergone little evolutionary mutation in the past millenium.
Ghostrays, jellyrays, crimson rays and rabbit rays likely all share a common evolutionary ancestor. The 'alpha ray' would have evolved deep in the ocean trenches, quickly growing in line with available food supplies. It would have most resembled the ghostray in size and appearance, with translucent skin for camouflage and forward-mounted eyes for hunting. A fast and fearsome stalker of small creatures in the dark.
While some rays have stayed within the limits of the cave systems where they first evolved, others are relatively more recent adaptations to new environments, likely the results of overpopulation.
All of the rays on 4546B have given up predation in favor of herbivorous scavenging, and use poisonous flesh to protect themselves.
Source: Scan Ray Species in the Disease Research Facility