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Agnotozoa

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Agnotozoa
Trichoplax adhaerens.
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Subkingdom:
Agnotozoa

Moore et al., 1952[1]
Phyla

Agnotozoa is a subkingdom of simple animals. It is one of the three animal subkingdoms, along with Parazoa and Eumetazoa.[2] It is nearly synonymous with Mesozoa.[3]

Agnotozoa was first used as one of the branches of the subkingdom Metazoa. It was then considered to contain only one group, Mesozoa.

More recently, some have used the name to refer to a subkingdom of three small phyla of simple animals without organs, Placozoa, Orthonectida, and Rhombozoa. They are known as "simple" though they have differentiated tissue, because that tissue is only organized in simple ways; for example, by being layered. The Orthonectida and Rhombozoa are grouped into the Mesozoa.[citation needed]

Biologists today generally do not use the taxon Agnotozoa because it is doubted that placozoans are closely related to mesozoans and that orthonectids and rhombozoans are related to each other. Even if the two are related, there is little need for another name in addition to mesozoa.

References

  1. ^ Moore, Raymond C., Lalicker, Cecil G., & Fischer, Alfred G. 1952. Invertebrate Fossils. McGraw-Hill, New York. Page 17.
  2. ^ Blackwelder, Richard E. (1963). Classification of the animal kingdom. Carbondale, Ill: Southern Illinois University Press.
  3. ^ Blackwelder, Richard E. (1963). Classification of the animal kingdom. Carbondale, Ill: Southern Illinois University Press.