Just wondering. Everything they eat seems to be from an animal of some kind, although it's hard to tell with some of their grub.
Worf drinks prune juice, and Klingons drink blood wine (described as twice as potent as whiskey, so assuming we're talking about 80% alcohol-regular-store-whiskey, blood wine is as alcoholic as high-alcohol moonshine, around 160% alcohol). I don't know what blood wine is actually made from. The main point for me here is that this seems to be as close as Klingons get to ingesting anything that's not of animal origin.
If Klingons are obligate carnivores, that would go a long way toward explaining their aggressiveness. They should be predisposed by their hormones and brain structures to regard other aliens as prey and then, by extension, slaves.
I'm pretty sure that whatever Work changed into in the TNG episode "Genesis" is intended by the writers to be something in the direct Klingon evolutionary line. I know we saw crewmen become things that are notably not in any direct phylogenetic lineage (which actually bolsters the whole viral transductor triggering introns idea, rather than the silly false evolution concept that the episode sometimes seems to verge on), but my impression was that this was supposed to be the Klingon equivalent of whatever hominid Riker became. Worf sure seemed entirely carnivorous to me as that possible Klingon "ancestor," suggesting that that's all their (Klingons as we know them in the 24th century) digestive tracts can deal with in any significant amounts.
Well, if anyone knows better, or has other opinions, I'd be interested in reading.
Worf drinks prune juice, and Klingons drink blood wine (described as twice as potent as whiskey, so assuming we're talking about 80% alcohol-regular-store-whiskey, blood wine is as alcoholic as high-alcohol moonshine, around 160% alcohol). I don't know what blood wine is actually made from. The main point for me here is that this seems to be as close as Klingons get to ingesting anything that's not of animal origin.
If Klingons are obligate carnivores, that would go a long way toward explaining their aggressiveness. They should be predisposed by their hormones and brain structures to regard other aliens as prey and then, by extension, slaves.
I'm pretty sure that whatever Work changed into in the TNG episode "Genesis" is intended by the writers to be something in the direct Klingon evolutionary line. I know we saw crewmen become things that are notably not in any direct phylogenetic lineage (which actually bolsters the whole viral transductor triggering introns idea, rather than the silly false evolution concept that the episode sometimes seems to verge on), but my impression was that this was supposed to be the Klingon equivalent of whatever hominid Riker became. Worf sure seemed entirely carnivorous to me as that possible Klingon "ancestor," suggesting that that's all their (Klingons as we know them in the 24th century) digestive tracts can deal with in any significant amounts.
Well, if anyone knows better, or has other opinions, I'd be interested in reading.