382 LABIATiE. Scutellaria. 



the calyx : corolla puberulent ; lower lip nearly erect and surpassing the upper : nutlets 

 densely muriculate-scabrous. — Spec. ii. 599; Engl. Bot. t. 593 ; Schk. Handb. t. 167. — Wet 

 soil, Atlantic States, from mountains of Carolina to Newfoundland, Mackenzie River, and 

 westward from mountains of Arizona to Brit. Columbia. (Eu., N. Asia.) 



§ 2. Nutlets raised on a slender gynobase, each surrounded by a conspicuous 

 membranaceous wing in the manner of Perilomia, the faces muricate. (Here 

 also a Japanese species, *S'. Guilielmi.) 



S. nervosa, Pursh. Glabrous : rootstocks or stolons filiform : stems slender, rather sim- 

 ple, 4-quetrous (10 to 20 inches high) : leaves membranaceous, coarsely few-toothed, rather 

 prominently quintui)le-ribbed from near the base ; the lowest cordate and short-petioled ; 

 the others sessile or nearly so ; middle ones ovate ; floral ovate-lanceolate, gradually 

 smaller and more entire, much surpassing the a.xillary secund flowers : corolla bluish, 4 

 lines long, with lower lip exceeding the straightish merely concave upper one. — Pursh, Fl. 

 ii. 412 ; Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. viii. 370. S. tencri/olia, Smith. S. yracilis, Nutt. Gen. ii. 

 37. — Moist thickets. New York to Virginia, Ohio, and Missouri. 



37. SALIZARIA, Torr. (In honor of Don Jose Salizar y Larrequi, the 

 Mexican Commissioner of the U. S. and Mex. Boundary Survey.) — Bot. Mex. 

 Bound. 133, t. 39. — Single species of a remarkable genus. 



S. Mexicana, Torr. 1. c. Shrubby, 2 or 3 feet high, with diffuse or sarmentose slender 

 soft-canescent branches : leaves remote, glabrate, small, oblong or broadly lanceolate, 

 short-petioled, mostly entire; floral reduced to bracts of the short and loose terminal 

 racemes : flowers less than inch long : corolla purplish, or the spreading lower lip deep 

 purple : fructiferous vesicular calyx half inch or more in diameter. — Bot. Calif, i. G04. — 

 Ravines, S. E. California in the Mohave desert, S. Nevada and Utah, Arizona, Fremont, 

 Parry, Cooper, Palmer. (Adjacent Mex.) 



38. BRUNELLA, Tourn. Self-heal, or Heal-All. (Commonly 

 written Prunella, but said to come from the old German word Breune or Braune, 

 an affection of the throat, which the plant was thought to cure.) — Low peren- 

 nials ; with nearly simple stems, terminated by a short verticillastrate-spicate or 

 capitate inflorescence, with imbricated round-ovate and nervose bracts or floral 

 leaves of about the length of the calyx, each subtending 3 subsessile flowers : fl. 

 all summer. 



B. vulgaris, L. Leaves ovate-oblong, entire or toothed, slender-petioled, commonly pubes- 

 cent : corolla not twice the lengtli of the purplish calyx, violet, purplish, &c., rarely white. 

 — Fields and borders of copses, Newfoundland to Florida, and west to California and 

 northward; evidently indigenous in some of the cooler districts. (Eu., Asia, Mex.) 



39. BHAZOE/IA, Engelm. & Gray. (Discovered on the Rio Brazos, 

 Texas.) — A genus of two annuals, of rather low stature : leaves oblong, mostly 

 sessile, denticulate ; lowest tapering into a petiole ; floral diminished to small 

 ovate or oblong-lanceolate bracts to the single flowers of the virgate racemes or 

 spikes : corolla rose-purple : fl. summer. — PL Lindh. i. 47 ; Gray, Chloris, 34, 

 t. ; Benth. in DC. Prodr. xii. 434. 



B. truncata, Engelm. & Gray, 1. c. Somewhat pubescent, at least the raceme and 

 calyx viscid-hairy: spike dense and strict, simple or sometimes branching: calyx much 

 reticulated, truncate, its broad lips of equal length, obscurely lobed, mucronately denticu- 

 late (3 or 4 inches in fruit): corolla three-fourths inch long; upper lip and middle lobe 

 of lower deeply emarginate, all the lobes denticulate ; palate somewhat prominent ; tube 

 pilose-annulate near the base : anthers somewhat hairy : nutlets puberulent. — Chloris, 1. c. 

 t. 5. Phi/soste(/ia truncata, Benth. Lab. 305 ; Hook. Bot. Mag. t. 3494. — Sandy soil, in 

 plains and prairies of E. Texas, Berlundier, Drummond, Lindheimer, &c. 



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