“…Integrating legacy loci with target capture datasets has benefits, such as increasing the resolution power for phylogenetic inference and the inclusion of rare species with existing legacy data that are difficult to sample repeatedly (Branstetter et al, 2017; Derkarabetian et al, 2019; Zhang et al, 2019). While legacy locus data can be integrated with target capture data by designing baits from legacy loci (Branstetter et al, 2017; Simon et al, 2019; Hughes et al, 2021), this may increase the cost of custom probe kits because more baits may be required across more species due to higher substitution rates of some loci (e.g., mtDNA) and/or these baits may be included in a separate kit to prevent high copy number loci, like those on the mtDNA genome or the rRNA operon, from dominating capture data (Ströher et al, 2016; Pierce et al, 2017; Allio et al, 2020; Branstetter et al, 2021; Miller et al, 2022). Extracting legacy loci from off-target reads can circumvent some of these issues (Miller et al, 2022), and they have been successfully integrated with capture data despite their often-fewer numbers (compared to, e.g., 1000+ UCE loci) and/or introduction of large amounts of missing data (e.g., Simon et al, 2019; Miller et al, 2022).…”