Common Name: MINT FAMILY Habit: Annual to shrub [tree, vine], glabrous to hairy, generally aromatic. Stem: generally erect, generally 4-angled. Leaf: generally simple to deeply lobed, generally opposite, generally gland-dotted. Inflorescence: generally cymes, generally many in dense axillary clusters surrounding stem, generally separated by evident internodes or collectively crowded, spike- or panicle-like, occasionally head-like or raceme, subtended by leaves or bracts; flowers sessile or pedicelled. Flower: generally bisexual; calyx generally 5-lobed, radial to bilateral; corolla generally bilateral, 1--2-lipped, upper lip entire or 2-lobed, +- flat to hood-like, occasionally 0, lower lip generally 3-lobed; stamens generally 4, epipetalous, generally exserted, paired, pairs generally unequal, occasionally 2, staminodes 2 or 0; ovary superior, generally 4-lobed to base chambers 2, ovules 2 per chamber, style 1, generally arising from center at junction of lobes, stigmas generally 2. Fruit: generally 4 nutlets, generally ovoid to oblong, smooth. Genera In Family: +- 230 genera, 7200 species: worldwide. Many cultivated for herbs, oils (Lavandula, lavender; Mentha, mint; Rosmarinus, rosemary; Thymus, thyme), some cultivated as ornamental (in California Cedronella, Leonotis, Monarda, Phlomis). Note:Moluccella laevis L., shell flower, historical waif in California. Satureja calamintha (L.) Scheele subsp. ascendens (Jordan) Briq. reported as alien but not naturalized. Salazaria moved to Scutellaria; California Hyptis moved to Condea, California Satureja moved to Clinopodium. eFlora Treatment Author: Dieter H. Wilken & Margriet Wetherwax, family description, key to genera, except as noted Scientific Editor: Douglas H. Goldman, Bruce G. Baldwin.
Common Name: PITCHER SAGE Habit: [Perennial herb] shrub [tree], < 2 m, aromatic. Leaf: petioled, generally reduced to sessile bracts distally; blade generally 4--12 cm, lanceolate to ovate, rounded to cordate at base, crenate or serrate to entire. Inflorescence: raceme, open; bracts 1 per flower, leaf-like, lanceolate; pedicels persistent after fruit-fall. Flower: calyx 5-lobed, +- 2-lipped, scarlet-purple in age, enlarging in fruit, generally falling with fruit; corolla 5-lobed, 2-lipped, white to lavender tinged, lower lip longer, upper lip 4-lobed; stamens 4, in 2 pairs, included in throat, anther sacs spreading; style 2-lobed, included in throat. Fruit: 2--4 mm, round to oblong, black to dark brown, glabrous or minutely hairy. Chromosomes: 2n=32. Etymology: (I.I. Lepechin, Russian botanist, 1737--1802) eFlora Treatment Author: Deborah Engle Averett Reference: Boyd & Mistretta 2006 Madroño 53:77--84
Lepechinia rossii S. Boyd & Mistretta
NATIVE Habit: Plant with scattered long, branched, nonglandular hairs and +- dense sessile to short-stalked glands. Leaf: 3--13 cm, ovate to deltate-ovate, base truncate to cordate, irregularly and shallowly serrate to dentate. Inflorescence: axis bent 60--90° relative to stem; bracts ascending. Flower: pedicel 1.2--1.3 cm; calyx bell-shaped, short-stalked-glandular, lobes < tube, generally >= 1 with marginal tooth, 0.5--1.5 mm. Fruit: glabrous. Ecology: Chaparral; Elevation: 470--1200 m. Bioregional Distribution: WTR (Liebre, Topatopa mtns). Flowering Time: May--Sep Jepson eFlora Author: Deborah Engle Averett Reference: Boyd & Mistretta 2006 Madroño 53:77--84 Index of California Plant Names (ICPN; linked via the Jepson Online Interchange) Listed on CNPS Rare Plant Inventory Previous taxon: Lepechinia ganderi Next taxon: Lycopus
Citation for this treatment: Deborah Engle Averett 2012, Lepechinia rossii, in Jepson Flora Project (eds.) Jepson eFlora, https://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/eflora/eflora_display.php?tid=81648, accessed on November 23, 2024.
Citation for the whole project: Jepson Flora Project (eds.) 2024, Jepson eFlora, https://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/eflora/, accessed on November 23, 2024.
Geographic subdivisions for Lepechinia rossii:
WTR (Liebre, Topatopa mtns).
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