“…In the last few years, studies of animal mitogenomes have grown rapidly in number and approximately 40,000 mitogenome sequences have now been published in the NCBI database (Tan et al, 2017). By contrast, a mere 18 sequenced mitogenomes of Cerambycidae have been reported, among them being eight mitogenomes belonging to the subfamily Lamiinae, four mitogenomes of the subfamily Cerambycinae, three mitogenomes of the subfamily Prioninae, and three mitogenomes of the subfamily Lepturinae (Kim et al, 2009; Chiu et al, 2016; Fang et al, 2016; Guo et al, 2016; Li et al, 2016a; Li et al, 2016b; Wang et al, 2016; Lim et al, 2017; Liu et al, 2017; Song et al, 2017; Liu et al, 2018; Que et al, 2019; Wang et al, 2019). These few mitogenomes seriously restrict the capacity for phylogenetic analyses and phylogeography of the Cerambycidae.…”