The Filozoa are a monophyletic grouping within the Opisthokonta. They include animals and their nearest unicellular relatives (those organisms which are more closely related to animals than to fungi or Mesomycetozoa).
Three groups are currently assigned to the clade Filozoa:
From Latin filum meaning "thread" and Greek zōion meaning "animal".
The most up to date cladogram is
The ancestral opisthokont cell is assumed to have possessed slender filose (thread-like) projections or 'tentacles'. In some opisthokonts (Mesomycetozoa and Corallochytrium) these were lost. They are retained in Filozoa, where they are simple and non-tapering, with a rigid core of actin bundles (contrasting with the flexible, tapering and branched filopodia of nucleariids and the branched rhizoids and hyphae of fungi). In choanoflagellates and in the most primitive animals, namely sponges, they aggregate into a filter-feeding collar around the cilium or flagellum; this is thought to be an inheritance from their most recent common filozoan ancestor.
You were the sunshine, baby Whenever you smiled But I
call you Stormy todayAll of a sudden That ole rain's
fallin' down And my world is cloudy and gray You've gone
awayOh Stormy, Stormy, Stormy, Stormy Bring back that
sunny dayYesterday's love Was like a warm summer breeze
But, just like the weather you changed Now things are
dreary, baby And it's windy and cold And I stand alone in
the rain And I'm callin' your nameYeah Stormy, Stormy,
Stormy, Stormy Bring back that sunny dayOh, my storm Come
on back and storm Come on back and bring back that sun
againI need you Stormy, Stormy, Stormy Stormy Bring it
back, bring that sunny day, bring that sunny day Bring