'334 TERBENACE^. Phryma. 



titute of any coats. Fruit fleshy-capsular. Seed consisting solely of a' large 

 embiyo, which begins gennination at or before dehiscence: radicle villous, inferior: 

 cotyledons large, amygdaloid, conduplicate longitudinally: plumule conspicuous. 

 Flowers glomerate (inflorescence centrifugal); the capituUform clusters variously 

 disposed. 

 1 1 AVICENNIA. Calvx of 6 imbricated concave sepals. Corolla with short campan- 

 "ulate tube, and sliglitly irregular 4-parted spreading limb. Stamens 4, somewhat unequal 

 and exserted. Style short or none. Stigmas 2. Fruit compressed, 2-valved. 



1. PHR"^MA, L. LoPSEED. (An unexplained name, substituted by Lin- 

 niBus for Leptostachya, Mitch, in Act. Phys.-Med. Nat. Cur. viii. 212, 1748.) — 

 Single species. 



P. Leptostachya, L. Perennial herb, 2 to 4 feet high, slender, somewhat pubescent: 

 leaves ovate, acuminate, coarsely serrate; lower ones long-petioled : flowers small and 

 inconspicuous, sessile in slender and filiform at lengtli much elongated terminal spikes, 

 purplish, each in the axil of a setaceous bract and subtended by a pair of minute bractlets, 

 at Icngtii strictly reflexed ; the fructiferous calyx, detaching at maturity, apt to adhere to 

 fleece and clothing by the hooked tips of the awn-like teeth in the manner of a bur. — 

 Gsertn. Fr. t. 75; Lam. 111. t. 516; Schauer in DC. Prodr. xi. 520. — Moist and open woods, 

 Canada to Florida and Missouri: fl. summer. (Japan to Nepal.) 



2. PRIVA, Adans. (Name of unknown derivation.) — Homely perennial 

 herbs of warm climates; with petioled coarsely serrate leaves, and terminal spikes 

 of small dull flowers, in sumther. 



P. echinata, JUSS. Somewhat pubescent: leaves ovate, somewhat cordate: flowers 

 alternate-in the slender spike: fruiting calyx hirsute with small hooked hairs: fruit ovate, 

 4-angled, splitting into 2 nutlets, eacli 2-seeded, spiny-toothed on the back. — Jacq. Obs. 

 t. 24; Sloane, Jam. t. 110; Chapm. Fl. 206. — S. Florida. (Trop. Amer.) 



3. STACHYTARPH£1TA, Vahl. (Name formed of craxvg, spike, and 

 raQ(fvg, dense, written Stachytarpha by Link and some succeeding authors, that it 

 might better accord with the etymology.) —Tropical herbs or undershrubs, chiefly 

 American ; with mostly serrate and sometimes alternate leaves, and dense ter- 

 minal spik,es ; the flowers, or at least the fruiting calyx, often half immersed in 

 longitudinal excavations of the stout rhachis, subtended each by a small and 

 usually paleaceous bract. 



S Jamaicensis, Vahl. Annual, but suffrutescent, glab'rate : leaves oval or oblong, 

 coarsely serrate, tapering into the petiole : spike as thick as a goose-qmll, 6 to 10 mches 

 long : bracts appressed, striate, aristulate-acuminate : flowers sunk in deep excavations of 

 the tliickening rhachis: calyx becoming compressed and 2-cleft: corolla blue, its borcter 

 4 lines broad. -Enum. i. 206 (Sloane, Jam. t. 107; Uesc. Ant. vi. t. 692) ; Chapm. Fl. 

 " 308. Verbena Jamaicensis, L. — S. Florida. ( W. Ind. to Guiana.) 



4. BOtrCHEA, Cham. {Charles and Peter Bouche, Berlin gardeners.) — 

 Between the preceding and following genera, American, African, and Indian: 

 flowers not immersed in the slender rhachis of the spike ; in summer. 



§ 1. Leaves petioled and serrate (as in the genus generally) : flowers small. 

 B. Ehrenbergii, Cham. Annual, a span to 2 feet high", barely puberulent, brachiately 

 branched: leaves ovate or oval: spikes short: flowers crowded: corolla little exserted, 

 bluish, 3 lines long: tip of fruit exserted from the shortish tube of calyx. — Linn. vii. 253; 

 Schauer in DC. Prodr. xi. 558; Torr. in Bot. Mex. Bound. 126. Verbena prismatica, Jacq. 

 Ic. Rar. t. 208. — S. Arizona, Thurber, Wright, (Mex. & W. Ind. to Venezuela.) 



