“…Chloroplast genomes are known to be highly conserved in gene content, organization, and structure among seed plants, are haploid in most flowering plants, and maternally inherited (Jansen et al, 2007; Raubeson et al, 2007; Yang et al, 2013; Zhang et al, 2015, 2017a). Utilization of chloroplast genomes in plant systematics and evolution has become increasingly practical with the decreasing costs of the next‐generation sequencing (Zimmer & Wen, 2015; Rabah et al, 2019; Valcárcel & Wen, 2019; Zhang et al, 2019; Wang et al, 2020). Thus, chloroplast genomes have been used widely as the molecular phylogenetic markers to resolve the maternal ancestors of various hybrid species, such as in Amaranthus L (Viljoen et al, 2018), Lilium L (Gao et al, 2012), Populus L (Zhang et al, 2017a), Tulipa L (Li et al, 2017), Vitis L (Wen et al, 2018, 2020), and tribe Maleae of Rosaceae (Liu et al, 2019).…”