The lophophore /ˈlɒfəfɔər/ is a characteristic feeding organ possessed by three major groups of animals: the Brachiopoda, Bryozoa, and Phoronida, which collectively constituted the Lophophorata. All lophophores are found in aquatic organisms.
It can most easily be described as a ring of ciliated tentacles surrounding the mouth, but it is often horseshoe-shaped or coiled. Phoronids have their lophophores in plain view, but the valves of brachiopods must be opened wide to get a good view of their lophophore.
The lophophore surrounds the mouth and is an upstream collecting system for suspension feeding. Its tentacles are hollow with extensions of a coelomic space thought to be a mesocoel. The gut is U-shaped with the anterior mouth at the center of the lophophore. The anus, where present, is also anterior, but is dorsal to the mouth. In the Bryozoa it is outside the ring of the lophophore. Some brachiopods do not have an anus.
Groups with lophophores are called lophophorates. In the old view of metazoan phylogeny, the lophophorates were placed within the Deuterostomia. Now they have been reassessed and placed within a new Superphylum known as the Lophotrochozoa (located within the Protostomia) which includes the Mollusca and Annelida.
Since you went away I've been losing my sleep at night
Never thought there 'd come a day
when you'd be back to make everything right,
but how wrong could I be
'Cos now you're here with me
Bringing on back the good times,
taking away the pain.
You're bringing on back the good times
and I'm living on air,
So glad that you're there,
sweeping away the sad times,
making me laugh again
I've never been loved by anybody
that's quite like you,
So when you're telling me
of all the things you want me to do,
now you've made me see
what you mean to me