298 MR. H. W. PUGSLEY : A REVISION OF THE 
flexuosis et sepius ut in F. capreolatd arcuato-recurvis semper longiores. 
Sepala 3-3°5 mm. longa, 1°5-2 mm. lata, lanceolato-ovata, acuminata, peltata, 
grosse serrato-dentata, preter nervum viridiuseulum | albida, corolla tubo 
paululum latiora. Corolla 6-7 mm. longa, roseo-albida; petalo superiore 
subacuto alis albidis patenti-reflexis apicem vix attingentibus et carinam 
viridem haud sequantibus preedito ; petalo inferiore marginibus patentibus 
albidis subspathulato ; petalis interioribus, ut videtur, omnino albidis. 
Fructûs majusculi, 2:5 mm. longi et 2°75 mm. lati, subglobosi, cirea medium 
latissimi, in apicem rotundato-obtusum et in stipitem obscurum equaliter 
angustati, paululum compressi sed insigniter carinati, in sicco dense sed 
tenuiter rugosi, nitidi, et apicis foveolis parvis angustis distinetis notati. 
The diagnosis of this very rare fumitory, known only from the Cape Verde 
Island of S. Antonio and unique in its combination of small flowers and 
broad leaf-segments, is taken from Schmidt’s specimen at Vienna, which has 
been lent for examination through the kindness of Dr. Zahlbruckner. This 
specimen now shows very few developed flowers, but such as remain are 
quite small, with the subspathulate lower petal elearly visible. The essential 
smallness of the flower is emphasized in Schmidt's very fair description, 
although, influenced probably by the broad leaf-segments, he contrasts it with 
F. agraria rather than any member of the Parviflore. Without more ample 
material it is perhaps impossible to determine with certainty the plant’s exact 
affinities, but as not only the floral characters, both of sepals and corolla, but 
also the form of its fruit recalls the Latisepale, it seems preferable to place it 
in this group, in spite of its foliage, rather than to regard it as an Agrarian 
species with a degenerate corolla. In the dried specimen the peculiar 
unevenness of the leaf-margins alluded to by Schmidt does not now seem 
traceable. 
F. montana is said to inhabit the rocks of the higher mountains of 
S. Antonio, probably at about 5000 ft. alt. (the highest point in the island is 
7400 ft.), and even at this height, in the latitude of Cape Verde, the humid 
atmosphere may aecount in some measure for the development of its foliage. 
The occurrence of an endemic species of the Parviffore on the west side of 
Africa is somewhat unexpected, but it may be noted that another species of 
this subsection, F. bracteosa, Pomel, is chiefly North African. 
The relationship of F. montana with the endemic species of the Canaries 
that has been referred to it, is dealt with under F. coccinea. 
29. FUMARIA KRALIKII, Jordan in Cat. Dijon, 19 (1848), et Linnwa, xxiii. 
471 (1850) ; Hamm. Mon. 23 (1857). F. anatolica, Boiss. in Pinard, 
Pl. de Carie Exsice. (1842), nomen solum, et Diag. Pl. Or. ii. No. 8, 
p. 14 (1849) ; Haussk. in Flora, lvi. 505 (1873). 
Icon. Hamm. l. c. tab. ii. 
Exsice. Sintenis & Bornmiiller, Iter Turcicum, 1891, No. 97, Dedeagatsch, 
ut F. anatolica ! Schultz, Herb. Norm. Nov. Ser. Cent. 20, No. 1912, Nisch, 
