Opalozoa
Subphylum of protists
Opalozoa is a subphylum of heterotrophic protists of the phylum Bigyra, and is the sister group to Sagenista.[2][1] Opalozoans are non-photosynthetic heterokonts that are ancestrally phagotrophic but many times have evolved to be osmotrophic saprotrophs in the gut of vertebrate animals.[3]
Taxonomy
History: phylum Opalozoa
In 1993 the name “Opalozoa” referred to a group of protists that was very different from what it is now. It was a phylum composed of many unrelated zooflagellates, grouped together because of the common presence of tubular mitochondrial cristae and the lack of cortical alveoli or rigid tubular ciliary hairs (retronemes). It also included the opalinids, proteomyxids and plasmodiophorids.[4]
Modern classification
The modern taxonomy of Opalozoa, down to order level, is as follows:[1]
- Subphylum Opalozoa Cavalier-Smith, 1991 stat. nov. 2006 emend. 2018
- Infraphylum Bikosia Cavalier-Smith, 2013
- Infraphylum Placidozoa Cavalier-Smith, 2013
- Superclass Wobblata Cavalier-Smith, 2006 stat. nov. 2013 [paraphyletic]
- Superclass Opalinata Wenyon, 1926 emend. Cavalier-Smith, 1996 stat. nov. 2006
- Class Opalinea Wenyon, 1926 stat. nov. Cavalier-Smith, 1993 emend. 2013
- Order Proteromonadida Grassé, 1952 emend. Cavalier-Smith, 1993
- Order Opalinida Poche, 1913 stat. nov. Hall, 1953 emend. Cavalier-Smith
- Class Blastocystea Zierdt et al., 1967
- Opalozoa incertae sedis:
Phylogeny
The cladogram below shows the internal relationships of Opalozoa.[1]
References
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