APPENDIX. IO5I 



cence hoary-villous; calyx often purplish, 5-7 mm. long, the upper tooth 

 acute, the lateral ones obtuse, the lower pair but little longer, triangular- 

 subulate; pedicels very short; bracts usually longer than the calyx, ciliate- 

 fringed; corolla rose-purple, somewhat smaller than in T. littorale and less 

 exserted, more or less pilose-bearded. Coast of Me. and Mass. Aug.- 

 Sept. 



2C. Teucrium boreale Bicknell. NORTHERN GERMANDER. Erect or as- 

 cending, rather slender, often widely branched from the base, 3-8 dm. tall, 

 or more; stem loosely pubescent with recurved hairs to glabrate; inflores- 

 cence somewhat villous-pubescent, scarcely if at all glandular; spikes 

 short, or the terminal one elongated and somewhat flexuous; leaves thin 

 or membranous, ovate-oblong to oblong-lanceolate, 5-10 cm. long, 2-3.5 

 cm. wide, acute, serrate to dentate-serrate, above minutely hispidulous- 

 puberulent, beneath thinly tomentulose, or sometimes glabrate through- 

 out; petioles of the main leaves becoming 1-2 cm. long; bracts mostly 

 shorter than the calyx, ciliate; calyx thin, campanulate, 4-5 mm. long, the 

 subequal teeth short and broad, the lateral pair very obtuse; corolla pur- 

 plish-pink, 12-15 mm. long, about three times the length of the calyx, 

 loosely short-pubescent and dotted with minute glands, the terminal lobe 

 broad. N. H. to northern N. Y. Aug. 



2d. Teucrium menthifolium Bicknell. MINT-LEAVED GERMANDER. Hir- 

 sute-pubescent with recurved hairs to nearly glabrous except the inflores- 

 cence, smaller and less branched than T. occidentale, the denser spikes 

 shorter, with the bracts often elongated and foliaceous, the pubescence 

 not viscid nor glandular; leaves firm, pale green, minutely pubescent to 

 glabrate above, white-veiny and thinly tomentulose beneath, lanceolate or 

 narrowly oblong, narrowed at the base, 5-9 cm. long, 2-3 cm. wide, acute 

 or acuminate, sharply serrate; calyx 5-6 mm. long, narrowly campanulate, 

 the teeth shorter and less rigid than in T. occidentale, the lateral obtuse, 

 the lower pair only slightly longer; corolla pink, short, sometimes not 

 twice the length of the calyx, thinly pubescent and glandular, the terminal 

 lobe small, often not broader than the lateral ones. Central Mich. 



P. 796, after Monarda scabra, insert: 



5a. Monarda mollis L. CANESCENT WILD BERGAMOT. Similar to M. 

 fistulosa and M. scabra, differing from the former in its canescent, not 

 spreading pubescence, and from the latter in its longer-petioled leaves 

 mostly narrowed at the base. In dry soil, N. E. to Ga., S. Dak., Kans. 

 and Tex. Summer. 



P. 781, after Ajuga reptans, add: 



2. Ajuga Genevensis L. ERECT BUGLE. Similar to the Creeping Bugle, 

 but devoid of runners, and the whole plant pubescent with long hairs. 

 Basal leaves tufted; flowering stems solitary or several, 1.5-3 dm. high. 

 In a lawn, Danville, Penn. May-June. Adventive from Europe. 



P. 857, after Plantago major, insert: 



xa. Plantago halophila Bicknell, n. sp. SALT-MARSH PLANTAIN. Very 

 similar to P. major, often diminutive, but sometimes as large. More or 

 less hirsutulous-tomentulose throughout, dull green, the spikes and scapes 

 often bright purplish; leaves thick, undulate, often prostrate in a stiff 

 rosette or ascending, the blades usually but not always longer than the 

 petioles; scapes stiff and slender, commonly upcurved-assurgent, the 

 naked lower part mostly longer than the leaves and often 2-4 times the 

 length of the narrow spikes; bracts thinner and less concave than in 

 P. major, mostly rather shorter and more ovate and acute; pyxis relatively 

 narrower than in P. major, circumscissile mostly within the tips of the 

 sepals and somewhat below the middle, lid longer and less conic than in 

 P. major. Salt marshes and shores, Me. to N. J. Type from Van Cort- 

 landt, N. Y. City, flowering in July, about two weeks later than P. major. 



