MR. C. C. BABINGTON ON FUMARIA CAPREOLATA. 157 
I. Pulneyensis. Bractec glandula terminate. Calcar non gibbosum. 
Hab. Mont. Pulney, alt. 8000 ped. 
$ D I. parvifolia. Folia minuta, cuneata. Pedunculi axillares, solitarii, 
elongati. 
Hab. Mont. Akka, alt. 8000 ped. (aff. I. pendula). 
$ E I. parasitica. Omnia ut videtur I. viridiflore, sed alarum lobus supe- 
rior sub vexillo reconditus. 
Hab. Mont. Anamallay, alt. 5000—6000 ped. 
I. elegans. Erecta. Calcar 0. Semina pilosa. 
$F I. Tangachee. Pedunculi folia longe superantes, apice 4-8-flores. 
Flores minimi. Calcar gracile. i 
$G I. Wightiana. Suffruticosa. Folia anguste lanceolata. Pedunculi 
solitarii, petiolum paullo excedentes, per totam longitudinem 
floriferi. Calcar breve, incurvum. 
Hab. Mont. Anamallay, alt. 4500 ped. 
I. phoenicea. Calcar apice inflatum. 
Hab. Mont. Pulney, alt. 7000 ped. 
Lieut. Beddome’s paper supplies the following additional habi- 
tats and elevations to Peninsular species :—J. scapiflora attains 
7000-8000 feet ; I. rivalis, 3000 feet ; I. viscida and Т. campanu- 
lata ascend to 7000 feet; J. maculata grows on the Anamallays 
at 4500 feet. 
I. filiformis is, according to Beddome, distinguished from J. in- 
conspicua by the glabrous pedicels, and J. cordata from Т. viscida 
by the peduncles not being viscid. 
On the Fumaria capreolata of Britain. 
By Cnazrzs C. BasrNGTON, Esq., M.A., F.R.S., F.LS. 
(Read November 17, 1859.] 
Іт is several years since there was considerable discussion amongst 
those botanists who take an especial interest in the accurate de- 
termination of British plants, concerning a Fumaria which grows 
plentifully in the Channel Islands, Western Cornwall, and near to 
the coast of Wales. It was then determined by Mr. Mitten 
(Lond. Journ. of Botany, vii. 556) to be the F. agraria (Lag.), 
and I, confidently believing that that identification was correct, 
gave a tolerably full description of it (Bot. Gaz. i. 62) under that 
name. At the same time I referred some Azorean specimens, re- 
ceived from Mr. Н. C. Watson, severally to the F. agraria (Lag.), 
F. muralis (Sond.), and F. capreolata var. media of Webb. Con- 
cerning this, Mr. Watson remarked that, “to his eyes, after ex- 
amining scores of the Azorean Fwmarias, living and dried, they 
LINN. PROC.—BOTANY. N 
