“…Their study confirmed earlier observations by Johnston et al (2005), who, after measuring the DNA content of 34 Brassicaceae species and sequencing the ITS region (internal transcribed spacer region of DNA between the small and large ribosomal RNA genes) for 23 taxa, had found that despite the evidence of species with decreases and increases in GS, including polyploidization, the evolution of this family's GS had a conservative nature. Polyploidy, and also dysploidy (an increase or decrease in chromosome number as a result of structural rearrangements) as mechanisms of genome evolution have been suggested for Ocimum, Orchidaceae, Bromeliaceae, Colchicum, and Iridaceae (Bory et al, 2008;Carović-Stanko et al, 2010;Rupp et al, 2010;Trávníček et al, 2011;Moraes et al, 2012Moraes et al, , 2015Jersáková et al, 2013;Fridlender et al, 2014;Gitaí et al, 2014;Yeh et al, 2015).…”