556 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM, 
3. Scutellaria galericulata L. Sp. Pl. 599. 1753. 
Type LocaLity: ‘‘ Habitat in Europae littoribus.”’ 
Rance: Alaska and British America to Arizona and North Carolina; also in Europe, 
New Mexico: Farmington (Standley 7153). Along streams and in swamps, in the 
Upper Sonoran Zone. 
Common in this locality in the cattail swamps. 
8. MARRUBIUM L. Horenounp. 
Erect, branched, densely white-tomentose perennial herb, with rugose crenate 
short-petioled leaves and numerous small flowers in crowded axillary clusters; calyx 
tubular, 10-ribbed, the lobes 10, equal, rigid, uncinate; corolla pale purplish, the tube 
twice as long as the calyx; stamens 4, included; nutlets granular. 
1. Marrubium vulgare L. Sp. Pl. 583. 1753. 
Tyre Locauity: ‘‘ Habitat in Europae borealioris ruderatis.”’ 
Rance: A native of Eurasia, introduced in waste places in most parts of North 
America. 
New Mexico: In nearly all the moister parts of the State; often abundant, espe- 
cially where sheep range. 
9. MADRONELLA Greene. 
Perennial herb 30 to 40 cm. high, with many slender erect stems from a woody root; 
leaves small, about 2 cm. long, oblong-lanceolate, obtuse, entire; flowers in a terminal 
bracted head; calyx tubular, 5-toothed, 10 to 13-nerved; corolla somewhat bilabiate, 
the upper lip 2-cleft, the lower 3-lobed into narrow similar lobes; stamens 4, sometimes 
unequal. 
1. Madronella parvifolia (Greene) Rydb. Bull. Torrey Club 33: 150. 1906. 
Monardella parvifolia Greene, Pl. Baker. 3: 22. 1901. 
Type LocaLity: Canyon of the Gunnison near Cimarron, Colorado, 
Rance: Mountains of Colorado, Arizona, and New Mexico. 
New Mexico: Near Mogollon; West Fork of the Gila. Transition Zone. 
10. POLIOMINTHA A. Gray. 
Hoary-canescent shrub about 1 meter high, with entire, linear-oblong to lanceolate, 
nearly sessile leaves about 2 cm. long; flowers in small axillary clusters toward the 
ends of the branches; calyx broadly tubular, with 5 narrow equal teeth, densely 
villous with spreading white hairs; corolla pale purplish, the tube surpassing the calyx; 
fertile stamens 2. 
1. Poliomintha incana (Torr.) A. Gray, Proc. Amer. Acad. 8: 296. 1870. 
Hedeoma incana Torr. U. 8. & Mex. Bound. Bot. 130, 1859. 
TypE LocaLity: Sandy places near EF] Paso. 
RANGE: Western Texas to Utah and southern Arizona, 
New Mexico: White Sands. Sandy plains, in the Lower Sonoran Zoné. 
11. CLINOPODIUM L. Wu Basin. 
Slender perennial herb, 30 to 50 cm. high, with villous-hirsute stems, petiolate, thin, 
oval or ovate-lanceolate, obscurely toothed leaves, and terminal headlike clusters of 
small flowers; calyx 13-ribbed, tubular, a little inflated below, the lobes linear, 
subulate, unequal; corolla longer than the calyx, 2-lipped, the upper lip notched, the 
lower 3-lobed; stamens 4; nutlets smooth. 
