Odd little creatures that hide themselves in the foliage. I would imagine them to be beasts taking on the appearance of plants as camoflage, but Pharloom has such a surplus of ambulatory plants that I can't be sure. While the body never varies much, the branches seem to take a number of different shapes and colors. The local populations seem bolder and more irritable than those that live in Pharloom.
In strictest terms these are only the young of the species, but the young are so populous that it seems more apt to refer to "fleas" and "adult fleas" than to "fleas" and "flea pups." It should suit adult fleas to produce so many offspring; for all the trouble young fleas get into I doubt the species would persist with smaller litters. Given a safe home they still manage to cause problems for themselves. Silly, playful things with no sense of danger.
Jumpy creatures that can occasionally grow to great size. In their native range they're very skittish. These ones seem much friendlier, which can be overbearing to creatures smaller or more solitary than they are. Long in the leg and the neck and generally gentle -- though the breed does produce outliers in personality.