https://www.selleckchem.com/products/GDC-0449.html pseudohastatus Puplesis Diškus, A. articulosus Puplesis Diškus, A. bovicorneus Puplesis Diškus, and A. insolentis Puplesis Diškus. We also comment on the re-deposition of some type series to the collection of the Zoological Museum of the Natural History Museum of Denmark, Copenhagen.A new species of Chvalaea Papp Földvári, 2002 is discovered after a photo on a social network and later collected in nature. Chvalaea yolkamini sp. nov. is described and illustrated here. In addition, for the first time we describe eggs with scanning electron microscopy and report on adult hunting behavior.Phylogenetic relationships among major hummingbird clades are relatively well resolved, yet due to the lack of morphological synapomorphies and relative phenotypic homogeneity, the systematics of several hummingbird groups remain unresolved. Here, we present the results of a multilocus study of a clade of emerald hummingbirds composed of Cynanthus, Chlorostilbon, Riccordia and Phaeoptila (sensu Stiles et al. 2017). We include taxa not analyzed in previous studies (C. lawrencei, C. auriceps and C. forficatus, from Tres Marías Islands, Western Mexico, and Cozumel Island, respectively), and this allows us to develop a new hypothesis for the phylogenetic relationships within this group. We found that this clade originated in Mesoamerica about 12 million years ago, and comprises four geographically congruent clades (a) the most basal clade, Phaeoptila sordida, of the Balsas River basin, Mexico; (b) Riccordia bicolor, R. maugaeus, R. ricordii and R. swainsonii of the West Indies; (c) Chlorostilbon assimilis, C. aureoventris, C. melanorhynchus, C. mellisugus, C. poortmani and C. pucherani, all of South America, except C. assimilis of Central America; and (d) a Mesoamerican clade with two Cynanthus subclades a widespread Mexican clade that includes species formerly belonging to the genus Chlorostilbon Cynanthus auriceps, C. canivetii, C. doubl