>>11322960>1Project Manager
Sebiretobi Insect
A medium size insect with an average body length around 50-80 cm.
This subspecies used to be found all over the world, but due to invasive species and destruction of their natural habitat, they have a declining population.
The 4 protrusions on their back shed and regrow over time, and the shed ones are gathered for use as an ingredient in food and medicines. Their resistance to famine due to their nature of eating anything, in addition to their relatively docile nature, makes them easy to raise, so they are bred on many farms.
The goal is to maintain/restore a more stable population of these specimens, through methods such as cross-breeding with similar species, and with the female breeders and researchers who have undergone the insect-multiplying ovary procedure.
>2Assistant
For a woman undergoing the insect-multiplying ovary procedure, as a result of her ovaries being treated with C+ (a species of parasite called 'Katena,' which are embedded with the genes of the specific insect targeted for breeding), she gains the ability to be impregnated through breeding with the insects. When a treated woman becomes sexually aroused, she begins to emit a pheromone that entices said insects.
The insects check whether the woman is healthy, and upon determining that she is fit for breeding, they begin mating.
>3The length of the Sebiretobi insect's penis is roughly 1/3 of its body length, and bump-like protuberances can be seen from the base to halfway up the shaft. Tapering off to a pointed tip, it can slip in through the cervix when it's time to ejaculate.
With a rapid thrusting speed, the bumps provide intense stimulation to the G-spot, inducing a considerable amount of pleasure. With a single ejaculation being of lesser volume than other insects, in order to attempt to guarantee impregnation, it is generally recommended to engage with multiple specimens at the same time, and to repeatedly copulate with each one.