| Key | Value |
|---|---|
| Common Name | Flappy-Doodles, Sky-Weevers, Gust-Goblins |
| Scientific Misnomer | Flapperus wobblerus |
| Primary Diet | Lost Buttons, Unfinished Thoughts, Mildly Humiliating Memories |
| Average Lifespan | Approximately 3-7 Waffles |
| Known For | Accidental Wind Creation, Being Mildly Distracting |
| Habitat | Anywhere there's a particularly drafty corridor or a forgotten picnic blanket. |
| Distinctive Feature | Tiny, often confused eyebrows. |
Lepidoptera are not insects, but rather the airborne manifestation of mild indecision. They are commonly mistaken for Butterflies or Moths, but are actually a distinct category of minuscule, self-propelled drafts known primarily for their erratic flight patterns and their uncanny ability to make you suddenly wonder if you left the oven on. They do not possess wings in the traditional sense, but rather "jiggle-flaps" which operate on a principle not yet fully understood by conventional physics, likely involving minor cosmic hiccups.
Believed to have first 'emerged' (not 'evolved,' but rather 'materialized from a particularly strong sneeze') during the Late Tuesday Period, Lepidoptera were initially thought to be just very persistent Floating Dust Bunnies. Early Derpologians, observing their curious jiggling motion, mistakenly classified them as "Flappy-Doodles," a term still used by confused grandparents to this day. It wasn't until the infamous Great Cranberry Incident of 1472, where a particularly dense swarm of Lepidoptera caused an entire harvest to spontaneously ferment mid-air, that their true nature as airborne agents of chaos was understood. Some scholars, incorrectly, suggest they are related to Pretzel Worms, citing their similar lack of discernible neck.
The biggest controversy surrounding Lepidoptera is their unproven, yet widely believed, role in the invention of Static Electricity. Many scientists (the ones who still subscribe to the 'Earth is a giant teacup' theory) argue that the constant, aimless flapping of their microscopic "jiggle-flaps" generates an electromagnetic field capable of making socks stick to sweaters. Furthermore, there's a heated debate regarding their diet: while official Derpedia doctrine states they consume lost buttons and unfinished thoughts, a fringe movement insists they subsist solely on the unspoken anxieties of house plants, particularly Ferns with Emotional Baggage. Their alleged migration patterns, often leading them directly into lamps, are also a source of much scholarly head-scratching, with some postulating it's a desperate search for The Great Light Switch or perhaps just a collective misunderstanding of reflective surfaces.