Monarda is in the
tribe Mentheae of the
subfamily Nepetoideae in the mint family.
Molecular phylogenetic studies of this tribe have been poorly sampled, and
relationships within it remain unclear. The genera
Blephilia and
Pycnanthemum are close relatives of
Monarda, but they might not be the closest. These are easily distinguished by several
characteristics. •
Monarda fruticulosa Epling – spotted beebalm - southern Texas •
Monarda humilis (Torr.) Prather & J.A.Keith - New Mexico •
Monarda lindheimeri Engelm. & A.Gray ex A.Gray – Lindheimer's beebalm - Texas, Louisiana, southwestern Arkansas •
Monarda luteola Singhurst & W.C.Holmes - northeastern Texas, southwestern Arkansas •
Monarda maritima (Cory) Correll – seaside beebalm - coastal plain of Texas •
Monarda media Willd. – purple bergamot - Ontario, eastern United States •
Monarda × medioides W.H.Duncan - Georgia, Indiana
(M. fistulosa × M. media) •
Monarda pectinata Nutt. – plains beebalm, pony beebalm, spotted beebalm - central + southwestern United States (Great Plains, Rocky Mountains, southwestern desert mountains) •
Monarda pringlei Fernald - Nuevo León •
Monarda punctata L. – spotted beebalm, dotted monarda, horse-mint - Quebec, Ontario, eastern + south-central United States, California, northeastern Mexico •
Monarda russeliana Nutt. ex Sims – redpurple beebalm - Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Alabama, Mississippi, Kentucky •
Monarda stanfieldii Small – Stanfield's beebalm - central Texas •
Monarda viridissima Correll – green beebalm - east-central Texas
Formerly placed here •
Blephilia ciliata (L.) Benth. (as
M. ciliata L.) •
Blephilia hirsuta (Pursh) Benth. (as
M. ciliata Pursh) ==References==