The
taxonomy of the order and family is undergoing several revisions, for instance, the family
Thaumatopsyllidae was formerly included in the order, but is now usually placed in the
Cyclopoida. and the genus
Strilloma is now considered a
taxonomic synonym of
Monstrilla, the largest genus. In General, the Monstrilloida are taxonomically challenging, both regarding their relation to other copepod groups and species assignment within the order. Monstrilloida was placed as a sister taxa to the
Siphonostomatoida, but a lack of mouth parts makes comparison based on homologies difficult. A more recent analysis placed the order nested within the fish-parasitizing
caligiform groups of Siphonostomatoida. Consequently, they would have evolved from an ectoparasitic ancestor associated with fish; most parasitic copepods are not free-living as adults, so Monstrilloids presumably underwent a change in life cycle strategy, host selection and body morphology. Yet the unique nature of the order Monstrilloida sister group of the Siphonostomatoida has been corroborated using modern molecular approaches. So far, no ultimately satisfying copepod phylogeny has been proposed, and the placement of the monophyletic Monstrilloida remains unresolved. As of 2019, the order Monstrilloida contains seven accepted genera with more than 160 species: •
Monstrilla Dana, 1849 •
Australomonstrillopsis Suárez-Morales & McKinnon, 2014 •
Caromiobenella Jeon, Lee & Soh, 2018 •
Cymbasoma Thompson, 1888 •
Maemonstrilla Grygier & Ohtsuka, 2008 •
Monstrillopsis Sars, 1921 •
Spinomonstrilla Suárez-Morales, 2019 == References ==