Elmiform
The elmiforms are a cross-species, cross-planet group of organisms that share, among other things, a body plan similar to that of an elmian or a human. These similarities, which go beyond just their body shape, are so many that they have led to the idea of a shared extra-planetary origin (i.e. several panspermia events originating from one celestial body that split in its trajectory), the Estranged Mother Theory.
List of elmiforms
The known elmiforms are the following:
- Elmians, the prototypical elmiforms, from planet Elm,
- Juleans, from Julee,
- Humans, from Earth, the only elmiform species to have become completely extinct,
- Felds, from World, one of two elmiform species not included in the Estranged Mother Theory (they evolved much later than the rest), and
- Clúnydd, also from World, the second elmiform species not included in the theory, and the only ones that can trace their ancestry to organisms from the dess.
Characteristics
Elmiforms share a number of characteristics that not only distinguish them from other sophonts, but also group them together in unusual ways.
- Bipedal locomotion and upright stance: all elmiforms have the following:
- Two pairs of clearly defined arms and legs.
- A torso divided into a protected upper half (the ribcage) containing major parts of the circulatory and respiratory systems, and a vulnerable soft lower half (the belly), containing major parts of the digestive and reproductive systems.
- A head with a sturdy hollow skull containing the brain and including the eyes, nose, ears and related processes, along with a mouth used to both vocalise and ingest nutrients.
- Genetic information storage: genetic information on all elmiform species is universally based on DNA, RNA, and the nucleobases adenine, cytosine, guanine, thymine and uracil.
- Reproduction and child-rearing: all elmiforms reproduce sexually, are viviparous, have one to two children on average, and breastfeed their offspring.
- Notably, all elmiforms have some kind of disaccharide in their milk. Elmians, humans, felds and clúnydd all share lactose content, juleans being the only ones to produce trehalose instead.
- Pentadactyly: all elmiforms possess five digits per limb on average.