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Life Forms of the Twelve Colonies

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This article documents flora and fauna of the Twelve Colonies as depicted in the Re-imagined Series. In keeping with Ronald D. Moore's naturalistic science fiction approach, the Colonies feature predominantly Earth-like organisms with minimal fictional species.


Design Philosophy

Series creator Ronald D. Moore initially avoided addressing Colonial animal life to prevent limiting the show's creative flexibility. In the Miniseries commentary, Moore explained the production's evolving approach:

David and I, we had discussed, at an early point; well, do they have dogs and cats and things like that? And we said, "No, no, no," let's not go there, 'cause that locks us into a whole Terrestrial-kind of like thing. We'll just avoid any mention of it. Nobody will even, like, register that we had "Chicken pie" the whole time, and in retrospect "Oh, I guess there are chickens".
Ronald D. Moore, Miniseries audio commentary

Despite these initial reservations, the series eventually featured live animals prominently, including two dogs and a cat, along with brief appearances by rats and bats.

Taxonomic Organization

Mammals

Domestic and Companion Animals

Romo Lampkin's cat, Lance (TRS: "The Son Also Rises").

Cats

Jake, a Landseer Newfoundland, on New Caprica (TRS: "Precipice").

Dogs

Livestock and Working Animals

Bovines

  • Tauron Bulls are a sports team in the Twelve Colonies circa 58 BCH (42YR).
  • Sam Adama has a Tauron bull dashboard ornament in his car (CAP: "Gravedancing").
  • The presence of meat in the fleet strongly suggests Colonials raised cattle or similar bovines for food.

Equines

Other Livestock

Wildlife

Bats

  • Seen flying from an abandoned warehouse (TRS: "Litmus").

Camels

Dolphins

Elephants

Gorillas

  • Mentioned metaphorically by Starbuck: "I'm gonna need some of those gorillas you call Marines" (TRS: "Sacrifice").

Jackrabbits

Monkeys

Otters

Panthers

Rats on Caprica (TRS: "Bastille Day").

Rats

  • Rats appear on-screen in abandoned areas of Caprica. Helo exclaims "Frakkin' rats!" upon encountering them (TRS: "Bastille Day").
  • Another rat appears in a Galactica storage area (TRS: "Litmus").

Squirrels

Tigers

Weasels

Birds

Birds of Prey

Blackbirds

Chickens

  • Cami mentions having "chicken pie" for dinner (TRS: "Miniseries").
  • Colonel Tigh imitates a chicken while mocking Starbuck's callsign: "Starbuck-buck-buck" (TRS: "Miniseries").

Ducks

Geese

  • Colonel Tigh mentions "big goose eggs" (TRS: "Water").

Parakeets

Pigeons

Sparrows

Swallows

Turkeys

Vultures

Reptiles

Pythons

  • Adama uses a python as metaphor: "Betrayal has such a powerful grip on the mind. It's almost like a python. You can squeeze out the thought, suffocate all other emotion until everything is dead except for the rage" (TRS: "Home, Part I").
Laura Roslin sees snakes during a chamalla-induced vision (TRS: "The Hand of God").

Vipers (Serpents)

Fish and Aquatic Life

Betta or Guppy

Salmon

Sharks

Invertebrates

Ants

  • Crashdown complains of feeling "like they have ants crawling behind their frakking eyeballs" (TRS: "33").

Cockroaches

Oysters

Plants

Fictional Flora

Chamalla

Fumarella leaf

Food Crops and Produce

Fruits

A bowl of virtual grapes in a holoband simulation (CAP: "False Labor")

Vegetables

Nuts and Other Plants

  • Walnuts: Adama cracks walnuts while reviewing potential CAG candidates (TRS: "Home, Part I").

Medicinal and Flavoring Plants

Algae

  • Mentioned as a potential food source. Tyrol references finding a "hot fudge planet" as alternative to algae-based meals (TRS: "The Eye of Jupiter").

Burdock

Cocoa

Coffee

Licorice

Narrative and Production Significance

The gradual introduction of terrestrial animals and plants served multiple narrative functions throughout the series. Dogs, particularly Jake on New Caprica, provided emotional grounding and normalcy to resistance operations. Lance the cat humanized the enigmatic attorney Romo Lampkin, while the presence of familiar foods connected Colonial culture to Earth despite their separate origins.

Moore's initial hesitation proved prescient—the appearance of Earth-identical species raised questions about parallel evolution that the series never fully addressed. However, the naturalistic approach ultimately enhanced the show's accessibility and emotional resonance, allowing viewers to connect with Colonial society through familiar touchstones.

Official Statements

In a December 28, 2005 interview with BattlestarGalactica.com, Ronald D. Moore addressed the potential for expanded animal appearances:

The presence of animals in the rag-tag fleet was something that came up in early discussions, but we kinda dropped it from the conversation as the year went on. I don't know if we'll ever get around to doing something in this area or not. It mostly depends on finding a story that supports it in some interesting fashion other than Gaeta finds a kitty. I don't think the Cylons are creating animals as we would define them, but they certainly see the Raiders and other craft as animals vis a vis their relationship with the humanoid Cylons.
Ronald D. Moore, BattlestarGalactica.com interview

In an ironic footnote to Moore's comment, Felix Gaeta eventually encounters not a cat, but a dog and his water dish that becomes integral to resistance intelligence operations.