( 436) 
Cocoanut Grove, Small & Nash, no. 175. 
Between Cocoanut Grove and Cutler, Small & Carter, no. 552. 
Between Cutler and Camp Longview, Small & Carter, no. 
Between Cocoanut Grove and Cutler, Small & Wrlson, no. 
1833. 
Lantana depressa sp. nov. 
A depressed unarmed shrub, the branches radiating, prostrate, 
reddish or purplish, more or less hispid: leaves numerous; blades 
tae: : 
bracts lanceolate, +5 mm. long, sparingly pubescent: calyx cam- 
panulate, 2 mm. long, 2-lobed, the lobes erose: corolla golden 
yellow, 9-11 mm. long; tube minutely pubescent, slightly enlarged 
near the middle; limb spreading, ee upper lip much broader than 
long, the lower lip 3-lobed, the middle lobe reniform: 
filaments scarcely as bee as the ace drupes purplish black, 
globular-oval, 4-5 mm. long 
This characteristic species differs from Lantana Camara L. in 
its prostrate unarmed branches and smaller flowers. The type- 
specimens were collected in the pinelands between Cocoanut Grove 
and Cutler in November, 1903 (Small & Carter, no. 747). Other 
specimens from the same region belonging here are: 
Cocoanut Grove, Small d& Nash, no. 180. 
Gossmans, Srition, no. 156. 
Black Point, Small & Wrison, no. 1826. 
Verbena maritima sp. nov. 
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 
without glands in the connective: nutlets about 4 mm. long, ridged 
near the base, pitted from below the middle to the apex 
A species related to Verbena Tampensis Nash; airing in the 
smaller, incisely few-toothed or lobed leaf-blades, the glandular 
calyx and the shorter and broader calyx-lobes. The type-specimens 
were collected in the pinelands, near Camp Longview, in November, 
1903 (Small & Carter, no. 1077). Other specimens collected 
south of Miami are as follows: 
