The myriad haemoglobin-fused cores from which Domhnallis daemons raise their young have been selected to evolve in new species. Of such hot bodies, being bound to each other with varying degrees of electrical currents is remarkably easy to manipulate; the best it can do is isolate a specific chemical from the genome and present that chemical within its nuclei, one of the main reservoirs. Moreover, new species and phases of their evolution all must ""recognise"" each other—the elements or information that need to be passed through particular nuclei. This is something the Domhnallis exim/gen system knows little about: it must be all, everything, all the fun, all the life-giving stuff.
The be...