266 MR. H. W. PUGSLEY : A REVISION OF THE 
and its general aspect is that of a coarse and rampant F. major with remark- 
ably poor flowers. It is notable that neither Boissier nor Haláesy recognizes 
the identity of the Greek with the Syrian form. 
There is a specimen of this plant in Herb. Mus. Brit. “ F. agraria, Lag.— 
In arvis prope Nebi-Seidone, circa Sidonem Syris, d. 13 Martii, 1860, coll. 
Gaillardot.” 
** Series Orientales. 
Fructüs obscure carinati, omnino obtusi. 
8. FUMARIA FLABELLATA, Gasparrini in Rendic. Accad. Scien. Napoli, i. 51 
(1842) ; Hamm. Mon. 41 (1857) : Haussk. in Flora, lvi. 542 (1873). 
F. alexandrina, Gasp. in Rendic. Accad. Scien, Napoli, i. 50 (1842), non 
Ehrbg. ex Hammar, pro parte ; F. capreolata var, 8, Parlatore, Mon. 
Fum. 77 (1844) ; F. Gasparrinii, Bubani, Fl. Pyr. iii. 276 (1901) ? 
Icon. Hamm. l. c. tab. 5. 
Exsice. Todaro, Fl. Sicula Exsiec. No. 221, Palermo! Reverchon, Pl. 
d'Algérie, 1896 (Kabylie), No. 103, ut F. capreolata ! 
This beautiful fumitory, which bears a resemblance to F. capreolata owing 
to its long-peduncled racemes of white, dark-tipped flowers borne on recurved 
pedicels, is included by Haussknecht with his Capreolate. Since the corolla, 
however, is distinctly Agrarian in form, it seems preferable to follow Hammar 
in placing it here. As in F. capreolata, the pedicels are frequently straight 
in shade-grown plants. 
F. flabellata is very finely represented in the exsiecata “ Reverchon, 
Pl. d'Algérie, 1896 (Kabylie), No. 103," as F. capreolata. 
F. alexandrina, described by Gasparrini, seems to be a rampant form of 
this species, as identified by Parlatore. Gasparrini, whose type of F. flabéllata 
appears co be a dwarf form from a native habitat, did not recognize that the 
two plants were conspecific. 
F. ambigua, Lojacono Pojero, FL. Sicula, 62(1888), is reduced by Nicotra in 
Le Fum. Ital. p. 60, to a variety 8. ambigua of this species, differing. from 
the type by its rosy flowers and larger fruits, Authentic material of this 
plant has not been examined, 
Examples of F. flabellata have been noted from South Italy, Sicily, and 
Algeria, but none from Spain. The specimens met with under this name 
from Istria and Dalmatia have proved referable to F. capreolata, F. Gaillardotii 
or F. judaica, but a Dalmatian example (Botteri, Cazziol !) exists in Herb, 
Mus. Brit. under the name of F. speciosa. 
An unnamed, fragmentary plant in Herb. Kew, collected by Miss R.A. 
Bainbridge in South Morocco in 1907, resembles 7. flabellata in its large, 
white, dark-tipped flowers, but its pedicels are straight and such fruits as it 
shows nearly smooth. ‘This may prove to be an undescribed species. 
