March, 1900. Plants Utowan.?. Millspaugh. 95 



leaves 1.8-2.5 x !-4- 2 -3 cm., strongly pubescent upon the larger veins 

 beneath, whorls 2-flowered. Environs of San Domingo (809), leaves 

 as in the preceding, but strongly pubescent above and below, whorls 

 3-6-flowered. Meadows near Port Antonio, Jamaica (928), leaves 

 2-3. 3 x 1.7-2.5 cm., pubescent on the veins beneath, whorls 3-6-flow- 

 ered. On Morro Hill, Santiago de Cuba (1074), leaves 3x3.5 cm., 

 slightly pubescent beneath, whorls distant 2-3-flowered. About the 

 streets of San Miguel (1469) and in the woods of the interior (1575) 

 of Cozumel; leaves 2.5-3.5x2.2-3 cm., glabrous, petioles and branch- 

 lets only slightly pubescent, whorls approximate 2-4-flowered. 

 Forests of Chichen Itza, Yucatan (1634), leaves 1.5-2 x .9-1.3 cm., 

 glabrous, branchlets long-pilose, racemes long-virgate, distantly 

 few-whorled, whorls 2-4-flowered. 



Salvia serotina sagittsefolia var. now 



Differs from the species in its simple erect stem, long virgate 

 branching inflorescence, sagittate leaves, 4 cm. long, 1.8 cm. broad 

 at the base, densely pubescent beneath, linear bracts, and sagittate 

 floral leaves. 



Dry fields center of the Island of Grand Cayman (1391). Type 

 in Field Col. Mus. Herb. No. 61391. 



Salvia tenella Sw. Prod. Yeg. Ind. Occ. 14. 



Pagets (38) and Walsingham (86) in dry hillside pastures, Ber- 

 muda. Low, with small leaves, 1-1.5x.8-1.2cm., deltoid, hoary. 

 S. Micrantha Vahl. 



Satureia Brownii (Sw.) Briq. Eng. & Prantl. Pflanz. iv, 3:300. 



Thymus Sw. Micromeria Bth. Clinopodium Kuntze. Damp meadow 

 near the Caleta (15 17) and San Miguel (1474), Cozumel, where it is 

 called "Poleo," the Spanish for "pennyroyal." 



Mesosph.'Eru.m capitatum (L.) Kuntze Rev. Gen. 525. 



Clinopodium c. Linn. Hyptis c. Jacq. Waste grounds at Catafio 

 (170), and the most plentiful and striking weed at the settlement on 

 Culebras Island. Environs of Charlotte Amalia, St. Thomas (518), 

 a proliferous form with from 2-4 smaller and sessile heads in the 

 axils of the peduncles, peduncles 2.6 cm. long, heads 2.4 cm. diame- 

 ter, accessory axillary heads 1.5 cm. diameter: another curious form 

 from this locality (554) has peduncles 8 cm. long, and heads 1.5 

 cm. diameter, with leaves 13x8 cm., the plant leafy to the top, the 

 uppermost leaves being lanceolate, 10x4 cm. Fields about San 

 Domingo (814), leaves oblong-lanceolate, 5-5-7-5x2-3.5 cm., pedun- 

 cles 3 cm., heads 1.5 cm. Old fields near Port Antonio, Jamaica 

 (955), leaves 5.5-7 x 2.5-4 cm., peduncles 2.5 cm., heads 1.5 cm. In 

 all these the upper surface of the leaves is furnished with scattering 

 hyaline 4-6 jointed hairs. 



While the species was plentiful in every locality visited from 

 St. Thomas westward to Jamaica, I failed to detect it at Santiago, 

 or at any point from there westward to Yucatan. Mr. Combs 

 found it (sparingly, however) in marshy grass lands near Cienfuegos, 

 Cuba, hardly its natural habitat, and Mr. Johnson is credited, in 



