GENERA FUMARIA AND RUPICAPNOs. 2750 
2 mm. lata, oblongo-ovata vel oblongo-lanceolata, peltata, acuta, parce dentata 
vel etiam praecipue basin versus paululum laciniata, nervo dorsali obscuro 
viridiuseulo albida vel roseo-albida, corolle tubum  subzquantia, longe 
persistentia. Corolla 8-10 mm. longa, rubra vel coccinea (in formis umbrosis 
albida), in fructu juniore persistens ; petalo superiore alis rubris angustissimis 
(carinam haud :equantibus) vel omnino obsoletis acuto angustissimo; petalo 
inferiore marginibus angustis erectis apicem haud attingentibus acuto; petalis 
interioribus prope rectis apice parum saturatioribus. Fructis parvi vel 
mediocres, 2-2:5 mm. longi ac lati, subrotundo-quadrati, obtusissimi obtusi vel 
rarius acutiusculi, inferne abrupte angustati, satis carinato-compressi, siccitate 
apicis foveolis parvis plus minusve distinctis rugosi. 
F. coceinea habitu gracili, floribus minoribus rubris angustissimis petalo 
superiore fere exalato preeditis ab hujus seriei aliis speciebus differt. 
F. montana, Schmidt in Beit. Fl. Cap. Verd. Inseln, p. 264, quacum 
F. coccinew forma umbrosa a cl. Haussknecht auctoribusque recentioribus 
confusa est, habitu robustiore, foliolis longius petiolatis cum lobis 
angustioribus, bracteis longissimis, floribus minoribus semper albidis, petali 
inferioris subspathulati marginibus patentibus fructuque majore subgloboso 
plane earinato distinguitur et ad subsectionem Latisepalarum referenda est. 
F. coccinea habitat in insulis Canariensibus ubi in montibus sylvaticis 
invenitur. 
This very distinct fumitory, which has been distributed at intervals from 
the Canaries under different names, can only be placed among the Capreolate, 
and is remarkable for its very narrow and nearly unicolorous corollas. 
In the living state, when not shade-grown, the flowers appear to be bright red 
in colour, and have been referred to by collectors as crimson, * coccinea,” 
and * sanguinea." 
The fruits of this species show considerable variation in form, for while 
those of Lowe's original specimens are quite rounded-obtuse, other herbarium 
material furnishes a transition to the subacute-fruited form lately obtained 
by Messrs. Sprague & Hutchinson. 
Haussknecht’s identification of this plant with Schmidt’s F. montana 
seems attributable to the similarity in size and colour of the flowers when 
F. coccinea is shade-grown, both species lacking the dark corolla-tip that is 
venerally prevalent in the genus. There is also some resemblance in the 
D 
sepals, but in other respects the two plants appear widely different. 
Sussrcri0 II. MURALES. 
Murales, Haussk. in Fiora, lvi. 513 (1873).  Capreolate, Hamm. Mon. 24 
(1857), ut sectio, ex parte ; Medie, Pugsley, Fum. in Brit. 15 (1912). 
Pedunculi plus minusve breviusculi, eis F. bicoloris et F. sepium exceptis. 
Pedicelli quam in subsectionibus prioribus sepius minus incrassati, nisi in 
F. Thuretii. Bracteæ longitudine variabiles sed pedicellos fructiferos raro 
