“Motie?”
In The Mote in God’s Eye, humanity encounters an alien race on a planet orbiting a yellow sun. The yellow sun is in line with a red giant, and the configuration is nicknamed “the mote in God’s eye”.
The alien race is nicknamed the Moties as a result. They are a species that has developed considerable diversity in body format and social function. The Moties are bipedal, roughly humanoid, but most of the Moties have three arms, two on one side and one on the other side, an example of asymetrical body structure.
About the only thing IR from HS and college biology is that the animals listed in OP are chordates: they possess a spinal column as a defining characteristic.
Yeah, I mentioned them because Nefario did when he introduced asymmetry into the discussion. And 'cuz I liked the book. Before it was cool.
But she’s not just talking about chordates, she’s talking about tetrapods–the branch of vertebrates that crawled up on land 360 million years ago. Lots of fish don’t have limbs, let alone four of them. Tetrapod limbs are modified fins, and the ancestral land-fish that evolved into the tetrapods happened to have four stubby fins that it could use to haul itself through the mud from pond to pond. And so all its subsequent descendants start with a body plan that includes four limbs, even ones that modify the limbs into flippers or have lost all their limbs like snakes.
Of course the tetrapod branch of the vertebrates has a lot of similarities to the other vertebrates, and the vertebrates have a lot of similarities to the other chordates. But some chordates only have those features in their larval stage: Tunicate - Wikipedia. One theory is that chordates are all originally mostly sessile filter feeders, but the vertebrate branch kept the larval body plan into adulthood.
OP did not exclude aquatic classes.
However, I agree it would be more interesting and challenging to limit the case to tetrapods as you do.
The link says inches, not centimeters.
I kinda did… I specified mammals, birds, and reptiles. While there are aquatic versions of all three, but they all descend from land versions.