186 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY 



and an undetermined Lantana said to climb 15 or 20 feet high and to 

 have orange-yellow flowers (351) ; Lippia dulcis, Trev. (330) ; L. 

 Stcechadifolia, H. B. K. (162% 313) ; L. callicarprefoUa, H. B. K. (278) ; 

 L. niynocephala, Cham. & Schlecht. (288) ; L. geminata, H. B. K.* 

 (162 in part); Tamonea scabra, Cham. & Schlecht. (110); Priva 

 echinata, Juss. (148) ; Bouchea Ehrenhergii, Cham., a stout form 

 (280), and a variety with laciniate-toothed leaves (102) ; Stachytarpha 

 dichotoma, Vahl (150) ; Petrea arborea, H. B. K., but it is scandent, 

 " ascending to the tops of the highest trees " (342) ; Verbena Auhlelia, 

 L. (236), and V. Ehrenbergiana, Schauer ? (153). 



The Labiatfe are Ocimiim micranthtun, Willd. (117, 252) ; Hyptis 

 capitata, Jacq. (309) ; H. suaveolens, Poit. (108) ; If. spicata, Poit, 

 (118); ff. spicigera, Lam., to which belongs Anderson's If. subverti- 

 cillata, from the Galapagos (116) ; Micromeria Xalapensis, Benth. 

 (106) ; Hedeonia Drummondi, Benth. (141, 366), and Scutellaria mi- 

 crophylla, M09. & Sesse? (242). 



The Borraginaceae are Cordia ferruginea, Roem. & Schult. (170) ; 

 Heliotropium inundatum, Sw. (165); H. phyllostachyum, Torr. Bot. 

 Mex. Bound, p. 137, which is apparently H. myosotoides of Chapman's 

 Flora S. U. S., and probably some old tropical species (129) ; Heliophy- 

 tum Indicum, DC. (164) and H. parvijlorum, DC. (163). 



The Scrophulariaceae axe Angelonia angustifolia, Benth. (104); Pus- 

 selia sarmentosa, Jacq. (223, 263), i\.ni\. R. juncea, Zucc. (115) ; Stemo- 

 dia parvijlora, Ait, (248) ; and S. peduncidaris, Benth., which I sup- 

 pose is also S. Jorullensis, H. B. K., and probably a variety of S. 

 trifolioluta, with peduncles an inch or an inch and a half long (267) ; 

 Gapraria bijlora, L. (184) ; Pogostoma saxifragcefuUa, Schrad. (HI) ; 

 Scoparia dulcis, L. (253, 305) ; Buchnera lithospermifolia, H. B. K., 

 too near B. elongata (117, 365); and Lamourouxia cordata, Cham. 

 & Schlecht. (112). 



The Solanaceae are a single and poor specimen of Solarium Jamesii, 

 Torr., perhaps S. appendiculatum, Dunal (175) ; Dunal's S. torimm, 

 var. ochraceo-ferrugineum (285) ; S. verbascifolium, L. (301) ; a single 

 specimen of S. scabrum, Vahl. ; S. volubile, Sw. ? (270) ; S. quadrijlo- 

 rum, Mart. & Gal.? (126); S. nudum, ILB. K.? (352); some com- 

 mon Physalis (215) ; Cestrum dumetorum, Schlecht. (322) ; Datura 

 Stramonium, L. (293) ; and Nicotiana plumbaginifolia, Viv. (262). 



* Dr. Torrey's Lippia Berlandieri, in Bot. Mex. Bound., as to the spccimen.s of 

 Wright, &c., is not the real one, but is L. graveolens. 



