Myzozoa is a grouping of specific phyla within Alveolata, that either feed through myzocytosis, or were ancestrally capable of feeding through myzocytosis.
It is sometimes described as a phylum, containing the major subphyla Dinozoa and Apicomplexa, plus minor subphyla.
The term Myzozoa superseded the previous term Miozoa, by the same authority, and gave a slightly altered meaning.
All Myzozoa appears to have evolved from an ancestor that possessed plastids, required through endosymbiosis.
The branching order within both Myzozoa and Protalveolata, is only partly understood. Three groups – the Colpodellids, Chromerida and the Apicomplexa – appear to be sister clades. Three other groups – the Perkinsids, Syndiniales and Oxyrrhis are distantly related to the dinoflagellates.
Chromerida are ancestrally myzocytotic, on the basis of evidence for myzocytosis by the chromerid Vitrella brassicaformis.
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