Opisthokonts are divided into
Holomycota or Nucletmycea (Fungi and all organisms more closely related to Fungi than to animals) and
Holozoa (animals and all organisms more closely related to animals than to Fungi); no Opisthokonts basal to the Holomycota/Holozoa split have yet been identified as of 2020. Holomycota and Holozoa are composed of the following groups (see
§ Phylogeny for more citations): •
Holomycota (fungus-like) •
Fungi • Includes: •
chytrids (flagellated,
zoosporic fungi) •
Fonticula (
more recent work considers this to be part of
Cristidiscoidea, a sister group to the fungi) •
Hyaloraphidium (previously thought to be a
green alga, now considered a fungus) •
microsporidia (previously thought to be
apicomplexa) •
Nucleariida (
more recent work considers this to be part of
Cristidiscoidea, a sister group to the fungi) • Excludes: •
labyrinthulomycetes (slime nets) (now included in the
SAR supergroup) •
myxomycetes (now included in
amoebozoans) •
oomycetes (water molds) (now included in the
SAR supergroup) •
Rozellida (placement uncertain) •
Holozoa (Animal-like) •
Corallochytrium (formerly considered a
Heterokont) •
Filozoa •
Animalia (including
myxozoa) •
Choanoflagellata (flagellates formerly included in protozoa) •
Filasterea •
Mesomycetozoea •
Amoebidiales (formerly considered trichomycetes) •
Dermocystida (formerly considered parasitic fungi or sporozoans) •
Eccrinales (formerly considered fungi) •
Ichthyophonida (formerly considered parasitic fungi
incertae sedis)
Phylogeny The following
phylogenetic tree indicates the evolutionary relationships between the different opisthokont lineages, and the time divergence of the clades in millions of years ago (Mya). Sources: • Holomycota: Tedersoo et al. (2018) [16S rRNA/Rpb1/Rpb2], Galindo et al. (2022) [phylogenomic]. • Holozoa: Tikhonenkov et al. (2020) [phylogenomic]. Notes: • The location of
Tunicaraptor is not completely resolved in Tikhonenkov et al. (2020). The possibilities of it being sister to all other Holozoa or being sister to Filasteria have not been ruled out. • Torruella et al. (2015) instead places
Corallochytrium as sister to Ichthyosporea, forming the clade
Teretosporea. == Gallery ==