320 
Verbenacese. Lentibulariaceae. 
464. Teucrium. Germander. XIV, 4. 
1. Cal. bilabiate; upper lip broad, entire; lower lip with 
4 teeth. Ls cordate-oblong, wrinkled, crenate. FIs greenish 
yellow, in slender spikes.—Woods, hills; distrib. 6 
Scorodonia L. 1793. 
— Cal. with 5 almost equal teeth . ... 2 
2. FIs yellowish white, collected in a head at the top of 
the spreading, tufted stems. Ls linear-lanceolate, entire, 
white-tomentose underneath.—Sunny slopes; gravel-beds 
of torrents; distrib. 7 . montanum L. 1794. 
— FIs rose-coloured, 1—3 together in the axils of ls (some¬ 
times reduced to bracts). Ls crenate or pinnatifid, never 
gray-tomentose underneath ..... 3 
[ 3. Ls l--2-pinnatifid. PI. villous-glandular.—Stony fields, 
fallow (wanting in G.). 7, 8 . . . Botrys L. 1795. 
— Ls undiv., crenatej ....... 4: 
4. Ls sessile, soft, coarsely crenate. PI with leafy stolons, 
and a smell of garlic. —Marshy meadows; not common 
(wanting in G. U. L. A.). 6 . . Scordium L. 1796. 
— Ls, at least the lower, rather hard, inciso-crenate. FIs 
in the axils of smaller, often coloured, ls. PI. shrubby, 
with subterranean runners.—Stony, thicketv places, hills; 
distrib. 6.Chamaedrys L. 1797. 
OBS. Among the pis of this family Ocymmn Basilicum L. and Monarda 
didyma L. are also cultivated. 
79 . Verbenaceae. 
465. Verbena. Vervein. XIV, 2. 
1. Ls coarsely inciso-crenate, the middle ones pinnatifid- 
trilobed, the middle lobe larger. FIs small, lilac, in 
slender spikes.-Road-sides, ditches; everywhere. 6 
officinalis L. 1798. 
80. Lentibulariaceae. 
466. Pinguicula. Butterwort. II, 9. 
1. Cor. whitish with 2 (often confluent) yellow spots on 
the lower lip. Spur short, conical.—Damp places of 
Alp., subalp. and higher Jura, rarely lower (wanting in 
S.). 6.alpina L. 1799. 
— Cor. violet. Spur longer, subulate. Type of P. vulgaris 2 
2. Cor.-lobes oblong-obovate, separate. —b. alpicola God. 
(longifolia Gaud. p ). FIs larger.—Damp meadows; dis¬ 
trib. 5 . . . • • vulgaris L. 1800. 
