Meehania cordata
Meehania cordata, also known as Meehan's mint or creeping mint, is a perennial plant of the genus Meehania, within the family Lamiaceae found in moist shady banks west of Pennsylvania to Illinois, Tennessee, and North Carolina around the month of June.
| Meehania cordata | |
|---|---|
![]()  | |
| Scientific classification  | |
| Kingdom: | Plantae | 
| Clade: | Tracheophytes | 
| Clade: | Angiosperms | 
| Clade: | Eudicots | 
| Clade: | Asterids | 
| Order: | Lamiales | 
| Family: | Lamiaceae | 
| Genus: | Meehania | 
| Species: | M. cordata  | 
| Binomial name | |
| Meehania cordata (Nutt.) Britton  | |
| Synonyms[1] | |
  | |
Description
    
Meehania, which was named by Nathaniel Lord Britton for the late Thomas Meehan, Philadelphian botanist, is a dicot perennial plant with calyx rather obliquely 5-toothed, 15 nerved. Corolla ample, expanded at the throat; the upper lip flattish or concave, 2-lobed, the lower 3-cleft, the middle lobe largest. Stamens 4, ascending, the lower pair shorter; anther-cells parallel. Low stoloniferous herb, with a pale purplish flowers.[2]
Meehania cordata, which is one of seven species of the genus Meehania and named by the English botanist Thomas Nuttall, are low, with slender runners, hairy; leaves broadly heart-shaped, crenate, petioled, the floral shorter than the calyx; whorls few-flowered, at the summit of short ascending stems; corolla hairy inside, 2–3.5 cm. long; stamens shorter than the upper lip. .[2]
Distribution
    
It is found mostly in eastern North America. In the states of
- Illinois
 - Kentucky
 - North Carolina
 - Ohio
 - Pennsylvania
 - Tennessee
 - Virginia
 - West Virginia
 
Threatened and endangered information
    
This plant is listed by the U.S. federal government or a state.
References
    
- Kew World Checklist of Selected Plant Families
 - Gray, Asa (1908). Gray's New Manual of Botany. New York: American Book Company.
 - "USDA Plants". United States Department of Agriculture. Retrieved 15 May 2011.
 
