Salvia 



Labiatae 



813 



7290. SALVIA [Tourn.] L. Sage 



Stems with 1-3 pairs of leaves, the leaves mostly basal 1. S. lyrata. 



Stems leafy, bearing more than 3 pairs of leaves. 



Leaves narrowly oblong or lanceolate, less than 2 cm wide. 



Annual; pubescence of pedicels retrorsely appressed 2. S. reflexa. 



Perennial; pubescence of pedicels spreading. (See excluded species no. 533, p. 1085) 



S. Pitcheri. 



Leaves oblong-lanceolate, ovate or oval, more than 2 cm wide. 



Stems glandular-pubescent above. (See excluded species no. 535, p. 1085) 



S. urticaefolia. 



Stems not glandular-pubescent. 

 Corollas about 1 cm long. 



Pedicels shorter than the calyx 3. S. sylvestris. 



Pedicels about as long as the calyx. (See excluded species no. 536, p. 1085) . . . 



S. vetrticillata. 



Corollas about 2 cm long. (See excluded species no. 534, p. 1085) 



S. pratensis. 



1. Salvia lyrata L. Lyreleaf Sage. Map 1761. Infrequent in a few 

 of the south central counties. It is usually found in dry soil but some- 

 times in moist soil in the "flats." It is generally found in open, bare places 

 on slopes in woods associated with black and white oak, or with beech. 

 It was noted as a weed in a woods pasture about a mile east of Charles- 

 town in Clark County. Here the soil was shallow and underlaid by lime- 

 stone. 



Conn, to 111., southw. to Fla. and Tex. 



2. Salvia reflexa Hornem. (Fedde Rept. Spec. Nov. 110: 102. 1938.) 

 (Salvia Imiceaefolia Poir.) Map 1762. This western annual has been 

 found established in a few counties. I found it to be well established in 

 sandy soil in a barnyard about half a mile northeast of Leiter's Ford in 

 Fulton County, and in a sandy truck garden along the Wabash River in 

 Gibson County. 



Ohio to Mont., southw. to Ariz, and Mex. 



3. Salvia sylvestris L. Map 1763. I found this sage in a pasture field 

 about a half mile north of Culver, Marshall County in 1920 and in 1937 



