254 DIADELPHIA-^HEXANDRIA. Funiaria. 



Mill, lllusir. t. 60. Br. in Ait. H. Kew. ed. 2. v. 4. 240. Ger. 



Em. ] 088. f. 

 F. n. 347. Hall. Hist. V. 1.150. 

 F. capnoides. With. 620. 



F. corydalis. Matth. Valgr. v. 2. 503./. Camer. Epit. 892./. 

 F. lutea montana. Lob. Obs. 438./. Ic. 758./ Dalech. Hist. 



1293. f. Moris. V. 2.260. sect. 3. t.\2.f. 4; bad. 

 F. tingitana, radice fibrosa, perennis, &c. Pluk. Almag. 162. Phyt. 



t. 90. f. 2. 

 Pseudo-Fumaria, flore luteo. Riv. Tetrap. Irr. t. 74. f. 

 Capnoides lutea. G(£rin. v. 2. 163. 1. 1 1.5. 

 Corydalis capnoides /3. DeCand. Syst. v. 2. 126. 



On old walls ; perhaps naturalized. 



Near Castleton, Derbyshire, far from any garden ; Mr. Howard, 

 on the authority of Mr. Robson. With. Near Fountain's Hall, 

 by Fountain's Abbey, Yorkshire. Mr. W. Brunton,jun. 



Perennial. May. 



Root of numerous fibres. Stem erect, a foot high, and, like the 

 footstalks, triangular, brittle, juicy, reddish and shining. Leaves 

 thrice ternate, of a bright, rather glaucous, green ; leaflets wedge- 

 shaped, with rounded lobes. Ft. in a solitary, terminal, upright 

 cluster, scentless, lemon-coloured, with deep-yellow lips. Brac- 

 teas very small, ovate or awl-shaped, serrated,, acute, much 

 shorter than ihejlower-stalks. Calyx-leaves ovate, or lanceolate, 

 with blunt points, membranous, soon deciduous. Spur of the 

 corolla rounded, incurved, very much shorter than the stalk, as 

 is likewise the rather compressed and quadrangular pod. 



Linnaeus at first confounded this with his F. capnoides, but subse- 

 quently took great pains to distinguish the lutea and its syno- 

 nyms. The true capnoides, preserved in his herbarium from the 

 Upsal garden, and apparently not known to the learned Prof. 

 DeCandoUe, is certainly distinct, having large, leafy, deeply cut, 

 stalked bracteas, pidev powers, an awl-shaped spur as long as 

 the rest of the corolla, pods twice or thrice as long as the Jlower- 

 stalks, and according to Linnaeus, who cultivated it, an annual 

 root, which Willdenow confirms j but the latter misapplies Hal- 

 ler's synonym. 



3. F. davicidata. White Climbing Fumitory. 



Pods lanceolate, undulated. Stem climbing. Footstalks 

 ending in branched tendrils. 



F. claviculata. Linn. Sp. PL 985. Willd. v. 3. 869. Fl. Br. 752. 



Engl. Bot. V. 2. t. 103. Hook. Scot. 211. Ft. Dan. t. 340. 

 F. alba latifolia. Raii Syn. 335. 

 F. alba latifolia claviculata. Ger. Em. 1088./ 

 F. claviculis donata. Bavh. Pin. 143. Moris, v. 2. 260. sect. 3. 



M2./.3. 



