Conduit Worm
this slug-like creature was named for the fact that it lived in the conduits used for routing electrical wire and optical fiber. An individual conduit worm lacked a true head, tail, or body core, instead being composed of component structures spread out along the wiring of their environment. The eyes of the conduit worm were held above the body on two stalks, and the worm lived by eating the metal and silicon in the cabling inside the conduits. Smaller beads of fiber stored energy like capacitors, while other beads created resistors to inhibit electrical flow to sensitive body parts.