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The species was named in the Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode "Rivals." El-Aurians appear outwardly identical to humans and have a variety of ethnic types, with both dark- and light-skinned members of the race being shown in various Star Trek movies and television episodes. They can live well over 700 years.
Pages in category "Star Trek species" The following 122 pages are in this category, out of 122 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. ...
Star Trek: A species with large, sensitive ears and an extremely materialistic culture. Foofa: Yo Gabba Gabba! A pink flower-fairy with a white cornflower on her head and chest. Gumby Gumby: A green clay humanoid character and created and modeled by Art Clokey. Jaffa (Stargate) Stargate SG-1: Kaylar: Star Trek: Klingon: Star Trek
Tribbles are a fictional alien species in the Star Trek universe. They were conceived by screenwriter David Gerrold and first appeared in 1967, in the fifteenth episode of the second season of Star Trek: The Original Series, titled "The Trouble with Tribbles". They are depicted as a small, furry, gentle, cute and slow-moving, but rapidly ...
Star Trek has an ongoing tradition of actors returning to reprise their roles in other spin-off series. In some instances, actors have portrayed potential ancestors, descendants, or relatives of characters they originated.
List of Doctor Who universe creatures and aliens; List of Star Trek aliens; List of Star Wars creatures; Lists of Star Wars species: A–E, F–J, K–O, P–T, U–Z; Species of the Marvel Cinematic Universe
The Borg in Star Trek: The Next Generation assimilate through abduction and then surgical procedure. In Star Trek: First Contact and Star Trek: Voyager, assimilation is through injection of nanoprobes into an individual's bloodstream via a pair of tubules that spring forth from a drone's hand. Assimilation by tubules is depicted on-screen as ...
Star Trek: The Next Generation – Starfleet Academy young adult series explores the lives of the Enterprise (NCC-1701-D) crew as Starfleet Academy cadets. Starfleet Academy (1997), a video game novelization by Diane Carey, is unrelated. The Best and the Brightest (1998), by Susan Wright, is thematically similar to the series.