322 PROCEEDINGS: BOSTON SOCIETY NATURAL HISTORY. 



NEPETA. Catnip. 



N. Cataeia L. Catnip. — Waste places about farm buildings, 

 roadsides and clearings; common. 



N. HEDEEACEA (L.) Trevisan. Gill-ovee-the-Geound. — {Gle- 

 coma hederacea 111. Fl. ed. 2.) 



Moist ground along roadsides and about buildings; frequent. 

 Occasionally in moist woods. 



ORIGANUM. Wild Makjoham. 



O. VULGAEE L. Wild Maejoeam. — Locally established on lime- 

 stone hillsides in the valley. Williamstown; North Adams; Stock- 

 bridge; West Stockbridge; New Marlboro; Egremont. 



PHYSOSTEGIA. False Dragon Head. 

 (Dracocephalum 111. Fl. ed. 2.) 



P. viEGiNiANA (L.) Benth. False Deagon Head. — Occasionally 

 established along roadsides; Pittsfield (Lincoln); West Stockbridge. 



PRUNELLA. Self HSial. 



P. vuLGAEis L. Self Heal; Heal All. — Lawn, Pittsfield. 



var. lanceolata (Barton) Fernald.^ — (P. vulgaris Man. ed. 7 in 

 part; vid. Rhodora, 15: 182, 1913.) 



Fields, meadows, open places in woods, lawns and roadsides ; com- 

 mon. Summit of Greylock. , 



forma Candida Fernald. — (Vid. Rhodora, 15: 184, 1913.) 



Savoy; Stockbridge; Sheffield (Walters). 



forma iodocalyx Fernald. — Riverbank, North Adams (Fernald 

 and Long). 



Professor Fernald has shown (Rhodora, 15 : 182, 1913) that the com- 

 mon Prunella in New England differs from the European P. vulgaris 

 in the character of the principal cauline leaves (the median ones). 

 In the European plant these leaves are ovate or ovate-oblong, rounded 

 at the base, averaging one-half as broad as long. This plant is found 

 occasionally in lawns. In the common PruncUa of the fields and road- 

 sides the principal cauline leaves are lanceolate to oblong, gradually 

 narrowed or cuneate at base, averaging one third as broad as long. 



