“…In spite of this high rate of sequence evolution, the vertebrate mitochondrial genome was long thought to be relatively stable in terms of genome structure, and rearrangements in gene order were thought to be rare events (Boore, 1999; Gissi et al, 2008). However, over the past 15 years, sequence-based studies have revealed that rearrangements are not uncommon, particularly in birds, where several different lineages have undergone repeated rearrangements (Abbott et al, 2005; Bensch and Härlid, 2000; Cho et al, 2009; Eberhard et al, 2001; Gibb et al, 2007; Haring et al, 2001; Mindell et al, 1998a; Morris-Pocock et al, 2010; Roques et al, 2004; Schirtzinger et al, 2012; Singh et al, 2008; Slack et al, 2007; Verkuil et al, 2010; Zhou et al, 2014). Despite the growing list of avian taxa in which changes in mitochondrial gene order have been described, questions persist regarding the mechanisms by which rearrangements occur, the degree to which duplications are retained over evolutionary time, and the effect that these rearrangements have on the function, replication, and evolution of the mitochondrial genome.…”