940 PITTONIA. 
roughish with scattered minute stiff suberect hairs; similar 
ones roughening the veins and veinlets of the lower face of 
the leaves, the plànt otherwise glabrous, pale green: leaves 
of lanceolate outline, 13 to 3 inches long, rather coarsely 
and somewhat evenly serrate, more commonly cut into 
irregular rather deep lobes, the base narrowed strongly to a 
short but distinct petiole: calyx-teeth broadly subulate, 
pungently acute: nutlets very small, obovate, the marginal 
callosity thick and narrow, of equal width around the sum- 
mit and at the sides. 
An exceedingly well marked Californian species, seen 
only in my own herbarium; the specimens collected partly’ 
by Elmer Drew, in the Sacramento Valley, at Elk Grove, in 
1888, and partly by Mr. Parish, who has distributed the 
plant as L. sinuatus from “ wet meadows of the San Bernar- 
dino Valley, Sept., 1888." None of the specimens exhibit a 
stoloniferous or soboliferous propagation. ` 
Lycopus MARITIMUs. Tall and stout, commonly 3 feet 
high, simple or with a few ascending branches from below 
midway of the stem, this rather sharply angled and the 
angles beset with rather copious spreading hairs, the veins 
and veinlets of the leaf somewhat scabrous: leaves oblong 
and lanceolate-oblong, 2 or 3 inches long, cuneate at base 
and subsessile, rather coarsely but not unevenly serrate: 
calyx-teeth ovate, acuminate not pungent, minutely and. 
hispidulously ciliolate: nutlets rather large, copiously 
resinous-dotted ventrally, dorsally cuneate-quadrate, the 
callous margin obscure. 
Plentiful in brackish marshes about San Francisco Bay ; 
the description here drawn from copious specimens obtained 
by the writer in the Suisun marshes in the autumn of 1889. 
There is no evidence of vegetative propagation except by 
the spreading of the regular main rhizome, which extends 
rather deeply underground. 
