1362 APPENDIX 



acute, coarsely toothed, rather long-petioled : calyx copiously pubescent; lobes ovate, 

 about as long as the tube: corolla white, about 8 mm. wide; lobes ovate, ciliate: 

 berries subglobose, 7-9 mm. in diameter. Differs from S. gracile in the copiously 

 pubescent foliage, the broader and long-hairy calyx and corolla-lobes and the stouter 

 anthers. 



In waste places and cultivated grounds, Florida ; and in the western United States 

 Naturalized from the tropics. 



Page 990, in first line of Solanum verbascifolium, after "Shrubby, 1J add "or 

 a small tree ' ' and in second line after ' l tall ' ' add ' ' or sometimes 9 m. tall. ' ' 



Page 1006, after Heliotropium Leavenworthii, insert: 



7a. Heliotropium horizont&le Small. Perennial from a stout woody root, 

 forming depressed mats: stem branched at the base, the branches prostrate, 1-4 cm. 

 long, commonly branched, strigose: leaves numerous, spreading; blades linear or 

 nearly so, 8-16 mm. long, acute, strigillose, short-petioled : racemes spike-like, many- 

 flowered: calyx less strigose than the stem; lobes lanceolate, 4-5 mm. long, acute: 

 corolla golden yellow; tube sparingly pubescent, about as long as the calyx; limb 

 spreading, 7-9 mm. broad: nutlets 2 mm. high. Differs from H. Leavenworthii in 

 the prostrate branches, the deltoid acute corolla-lobes and the fragrant flowers. 



In rocky pine lands, southern peninsular Florida. All year. 



Page 1010, after Verbena Tampensis, insert: 



16a. Verbena maritima Small. Perennial, sparingly pubescent. Stems 

 branched at the base, the branches decumbent or prostrate, 2-5 dm. long, obtusely 

 4-angled: leaf -blades cuneate to orbicular-ovate, 1-4 cm. long, incisely few-toothed 

 or somewhat lobed, mainly larger than the petiole-like bases: spikes few, many- 

 flowered: calyx slightly bristly-pubescent, 9-10.5 mm. long, about twice as long as 

 the bract; lobes subulate: corolla purplish; tube nearly twice as long as the calyx, 

 pubescent without and within; lobes emarginate: anthers without glands in the con- 

 nective: nutlets about 4 mm. long, ridged near the base, pitted from below the 

 middle to the apex. Differs from V. Tampensis in the smaller few-toothed or lobed 

 leaf -blades, the glandular calyx with its shorter and broader lobes. 



In rocky pine lands and hammocks and on sand dunes, peninsular Florida. All year. 



Page 1012, after Phyla lanceolaia, insert: 



4a. Phyla stoechadifblia (L.) Small. Foliage rough-strigillose. Stems usually 

 much-branched; branches diffuse or sometimes vine-like: leaves opposite; blades thick, 

 narrowly oblong to lanceolate, 2-12 cm. long, acute, serrate, rugose, the veins im- 

 pressed above, prominent beneath: peduncles longer than the subtending leaves: 

 heads globose or depressed, becoming cylindric: calyx 2-2.5 mm. long: corolla 

 purplish or pinkish, about 3 mm. long: fruit nearly 2 mm. long. Differs from the 

 preceding species of Phyla in the elongated rugose-plated leaf -blades and the 

 elongated mature spikes. 



In hammocks, southern peninsular Florida. Also in tropical America. All year. 



Page 1012, after Goniostachyum graveolens, insert: 



2. Gonioatachyum citrosum Small. A straggling or reclining shrub with 

 elongate and irregularly branched stems, the bark pale-gray or whitish, the branches 

 strigillose. Leaf-blades lanceolate to elliptic-lanceolate, 2.5-6 cm. long, acuminate, 

 shallowly serrate, pubescent on both sides, pale beneath, dark green above, narrowed 

 to petiole-like bases: peduncles solitary in the axils, 5-16 mm. long, strigillose: spikes 

 depressed, 4-6 mm. long; bracts ovate, acute or acuminate, the outer ones 4-5 mm. 

 long: calyx about 1 mm. long; lobes broadly triangular, much shorter than the tube: 

 corolla white, about 4.5 mm. long, minutely pubescent ; tube swollen above the middle ; 

 limb about 3 mm. broad: nutlets 1.5 mm. long. Differs from G. graveoleus in its 

 strigillose foliage, its sparingly and shallowly serrate acuminate leaf -blades and its 

 short spikes. 



In hammocks, southern peninsular Florida. Also in Cuba and Mexico. All year. 



Page 1016, after VITEX, insert: 



13a. CLERODENDRON L. 



Shrubs or trees, or half -shrubs. Leaves opposite: blades simple, toothed. Flowers 

 in dense terminal cymes. Calyx prominently 5-lobed. Corolla white or highly colored, 



