“…This extraordinary diversity in the DNA amount is not entirely dependent on the number of genes or overall organism complexity (e.g., Gregory, 2001), but can be mostly attributed to differences in repetitive DNA, especially, to transposable elements (Sanmiguel and Bennetzen, 1998; Hawkins et al, 2006). It has been shown that a substantial part of the AGS variability in plants is linked with variation in chromosome numbers, the number of polyploidization events or less dramatic changes such as rearrangements of existing chromosomes (e.g., Leitch and Bennett, 1997, 2004; Otto and Whitton, 2000; Bennetzen et al, 2005; Gorelick and Olson, 2013). Multiple recent studies point out that although AGS initially increases through whole‐genome duplication or accumulation of transposable elements, these processes are usually followed by genome downsizing by means of deletion of transposable elements, illegitimate recombination, or removal of large blocks of DNA (Sanmiguel and Bennetzen, 1998; Hawkins et al, 2006; Vitte and Bennetzen, 2006; Ross‐Ibarra, 2007; Tiley and Burleigh, 2015).…”