“…Mt gene rearrangement was reported in marsupials (Pääbo et al, 1991), birds (Mindell et al, 1998;Quinn and Wilson, 1993), reptiles (Kumazawa and Endo, 2004;Macey et al, 1997;Quinn and Mindell, 1996), lampreys (Lee and Kocher, 1995), and fishes (Mabuchi et al, 2004;Inoue et al, 2003;Miya et al, 2001); therefore, mtDNA can be used as a prospective phylogenetic marker (Boore and Brown, 1995;Macey et al, 2000). In anurans, the arrangement of mt genes in basal Archeobatrachia was found to be identical to that observed in typical vertebrates (Roe et al, 1985;San Mauro et al, 2004), whereas in the phylogenetically nested Neobatrachia group, the arrangement of mt genes deviates from the classic vertebrate type (Sumida et al, 2001). Recently, a large number of mt genomes have been reported from the neobatrachian taxon Natatanura (including families of Dicroglossidae, Mantellidae, and Rachophoridae with Nyctibatrachidae and Ranidae; Frost et al, 2006).…”