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Fairly simple question, if the Borg were to say assimilate the Earth would the wildlife be in some way assimilated too or would it simply be exterminated? Are there any instances of this happening?

Mithical
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IG_42
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  • I saw that, while an animal would have no "technological distinctiveness" to add there's still the possibility of there being worthwhile physical properties. – IG_42 Jan 29 '17 at 17:38
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    The Borg wouldn't even assimilate the Kazon, so it seems unlikely that they'd be interested in assimilating non-sentient creatures. – Ham Sandwich Jan 29 '17 at 18:43
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    This question spawned a humorous scene in my mind where a guy with a shotgun is in the woods hunting for deer... he see the deer, but as he lifts up his gun to aim, the deer raises its head from foraging and turns to face him, revealing a laser implant which paints a bright red dot right on the hunter's forehead... –  Jan 29 '17 at 21:12
  • The Borg assimilate spaceships, if that answers your question ;) – Lightness Races in Orbit Jan 30 '17 at 00:44
  • @T-1000'sSon As I said the Borg didn't see anything worth having in the Kazon's technology or biology, but I fail to see any reason that they wouldn't assimilate a primitive race if it had interesting physical traits – IG_42 Jan 30 '17 at 01:18
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    I appear to have been duped. http://scifi.stackexchange.com/questions/39898/borg-assimilation-of-non-sapients?rq=1 – IG_42 Jan 30 '17 at 01:19
  • What about their attempt to assimilate Species 8472 ships? Would that count? They're alive but I don't think that they are self aware? – AidanO Jan 30 '17 at 14:30

1 Answers1

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Main Canon

Within the main canon there are no examples of the Borg successfully assimilating anything other than sentient, bipedal, humanoid creatures.

That being said, there's no reason to assume they couldn't assimilate them, if the mood took them and they saw a benefit in doing so. Otherwise they'd just ignore them or kill them if they presented a threat.


Extended Universe (EU)

Within the novel The Return (written by none other than William Shatner) Picard encounters some assimilated dogs.

Two dogs—sleek Dobermans, pets of the personnel who had been assigned here, no doubt, trotted past. But they did not stop to investigate. Bioneuronic implants studded their skulls. Biomechanical tubes were grafted to their chests.

One dog turned to look at Picard as it passed. One eye clear though expressionless, so unlike the breed. The other eye had been replaced by a laser sensor.

Valorum
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