GENERA FUMARIA AND RUPICAPNOS. 299 
ut F. anatolica ! Heldreich, Pl. Exsicc. Grecis, No. 3479, ut F. anatolica 
(var. minor ?)! Sintenis, Iter Thessalonicum, 1896, No. 433, ut F. anatolica ! 
This very pretty fumitory has the aspect, when dried, of a miniature 
F. purpurea owing to its recurved, purplish flowers with large, whitish sepals. 
It also recalls F. Thuretii in the abruptly terminated keels of the outer petals 
and the slight development of the wings of the upper one, but it may be 
readily distinguished by the subspathulate lower petal of its much smaller 
flowers, which do not exceed 7 mm. in length, as well as by its much more 
obtuse fruits. 
F. Kralikii is well described by Jordan (loc. cit.), who is largely followed 
by Hammar, but its bracts are oblong or linear-oblong rather than oblong- 
obovate, the wings of the upper petal are narrow and do not cover the keel, 
and the very small, subglobose fruits (L:5-1:75 mm. long and broad), which 
show distinct if very small apical pits, are less “leves” than “subleves vel 
leviter rugulosi In some forms the racemes are at first very short and 
dense, though afterwards elongating. 
In addition to the habitats cited by Haussknecht, this species grows in 
Bulgaria (Herb. Mus. Brit.) and in Armenia (Herb. Kew), and would thus 
seem to oceur throughout the Balkan Peninsula and Asiatie Turkey, with the 
exception of Mesopotamia and Arabia. It is also represented in Herb. Mus. 
Brit. from the Crimea (Herb. Pallas, ut F. officinalis, partim), the label 
noting that it grows copiously on rocks. 
30. FUMARIA MICRANTHA, Lagasca, Elench. Hort. Matrit. et Gen. Spec. PI. 
Nov. 21 (1816); Hamm. Mon. 21 (1857); Pugsley, Fum. in Brit. 
54 (1912). F: densiflora, DC. Cat. Hort. Monsp. 113 (1813), et 
Prodr. Syst. Nat. i. 130 (1824), ex parte; Haussk. in Flora, lvi. 507 
(1813) ; F. calycina, Bab. in Trans. Bot. Soc. Edinb. i. 34 (1844) ; 
F. mucronulata, Schur, Enum, Pl. Transsilv. 38 (1866) ? 
F. tenuifolia, Gerard, Herb. 928 (1597), described from plants found in 
cornfields between Charlton and Greenwich. In Johnson’s ‘Gerard’ the 
description was changed to fit Platycapnos spicatus, Bernh., with which it 
was generally confused by succeeding authors although apparently distin- 
guished by Morison (Hist. ii. p. 262 (1680)) as F. vulgaris minor tenuifolia. 
Icones. Eng. Bot. Suppl. 2876 ; Hooker, Icones, iv. tab. 363; Hamm. l. e. 
‘tab. ii. 
B. dubia, var. nov. F. micrantha forma dubia, Pugsley, l.c. 57 
& 58 (1912); F. micrantha y. Parlatoriana, Rouy & Foucaud, FI. 
Fr. i. 179 (1893) ? non Boissier. 
Icon. Fl. Danica, tab. 2472, ut F. micrantha. 
Exsice. Ridley & Fawcett, Wareham, in Hb. Mus. Brit.! Billot, Fl. G. & G. 
No. 709, ut F. densiflora ! 
2B2 
