“…Plastome studies ( Tsuji et al., 2007 ; Smith, 2009 ; Wicke et al., 2011 ; Jansen and Ruhlman 2012 ; Ruhlman and Jansen 2018 ; Mower et al., 2019 ; Xu et al., 2018 ; Zhang et al., 2019a , Zhang et al., 2019b ; Kang et al., 2020 ; Xiang et al., 2022 ; Zhou et al., 2022 ) showed that plastomes of Selaginellaceae and their infrafamilial lineages known so far have a number of unique and diverse features: (a) plastomes of most plant lineages are highly conserved with quadripartite structure composed by a large single copy (LSC), a small single copy (SSC), and two inverted repeats (IRa and IRb), whereas plastomes of Selaginellaceae exhibit DR structure (also can be R, DR, IR, or DR-IR coexisting types) with small to medium repeats existed in SC, and plastome conformations ranged from one to 24 ( Zhou et al., 2022 ); (b) plastome sizes in most land plants are 120–160 kb but those in Selaginellaceae are 78–190 kb; (c) a plastome in other vascular plants usually contains approximately 120–130 genes but those of Selaginellaceae contain 36–128 genes; (d) accD/cemA/infA/psaM/rpl20/rpl21/rpl32/rpl33/rps12/rps15/rps16/ycf66/ycf94 and most of the rRNA, tRNA, and introns are generally lost or pseudogenetized in Selaginellaceae; (e) GC content in land plant plastomes ranges from 34% to 40%, but plastomes of Selaginellaceae often are extremely GC-rich (>50%); and (f) overall distinctions of plastomes among subgenera even among sections in Selaginella are much greater than those among orders/families/subfamilies/genera in other vascular plants.…”