The range of genome sizes for plant genomes is very large. "In animals they range more than 3,300-fold, and in land plants they differ by a factor of about 1,000" and "genome size is not proportional to the number of genes present in the genome", quoting https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genome_size .
I knew about non-coding or junk DNA but had forgotten how extreme it was.
Ended up learning about the onion test[1] and this interesting article[2] which suggests classifying non-coding DNA as either junk DNA, spam DNA or both, to better capture the differences that exist.
I also found this article[3] providing some interesting overview and discussion on the topic.
The range of genome sizes for plant genomes is very large. "In animals they range more than 3,300-fold, and in land plants they differ by a factor of about 1,000" and "genome size is not proportional to the number of genes present in the genome", quoting https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genome_size .
See also the chart "Genome size ranges (in base pairs) of various life forms" from that page, and the table at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genome#Genome_size .
Arabidopsis thaliana has about 135 MB base pairs. Humans have about 3.1 GB base pairs. Paris japonica have about 150 GB base pairs.