40 A FLORA OF GIBKALTAR AND THE NEIGHBOURHOOD 



Var. amcemis P. L. is regarded as the usual form, common 

 throughout Andalucia, but no specimens I have examined agree 

 with Debeaux's description in Fl. p. 78. III. ii. Algeciras, liev. 



Bosa sempervirens L. Bushy places ; especially by water- 

 courses ; frequent ; 5-7. III. ! Especially common in Cork 

 Woods ! 



B. micrantha Sm. Bushy places ; rather rare ; 4-6. The 

 segregate was named B. septicola D6s6gl. for me by Prof. 

 Dingier. III. i. By Lajo near Second Pine Wood ! About 

 Almoraima ! ii. By Miel from near source to below El Cobre ! 



[B. canina L. recorded by Kelaart is not a native of Gibraltar.] 



[Amygdalus communis L. occurs subspontaneously, more fre- 

 quently beyond our limits. A tree or two grows some way above 

 luce's !] 



iSjnraa flabellata Guss. Bushy hills; rare; 5-6. III. i. S. 

 Carbonera, Bev. 



[Fragaria vesca L. recorded by Kelaart as cultivated in 

 Gibraltar gardens.] 



\Potentilla Tormentilla Sibth. Bushy places in mountains ; 

 locally frequent ; 3-6. Only var. elatior Lehm. is given by 

 Debeaux. It is taller, leaves with broader segments, and stipules 

 tridentate, but I have seen nothing different from the usual British 

 form. III. ii. 1 



P. reptans L. Damp grassy hollows and stream beds ; fre- 

 quent ; 4-7. III. ! Frequently not flowering. 



Agrimonia Eupatoria L. Damp bushy spots and by streams ; 

 frequent; 4-7. III.! 



iAlchemilla arvensis Scop. In short grass in rather dry places; 

 frequent; 3-5. I have only seen small forms resembling A.micro- 

 carpa B. & E. in short calyx limb, but the fruit is ovoid, not 

 subglobose. III. i. First Pine Wood! Cork Woods! ii. Moun- 

 tains to Guadalmeci ! 



Poterkim verrucosum Ehrenb. (P. mauritanicum Boiss.). Dry 

 roadsides and fields ; frequent ; 4-5. Glabrous or densely pilose 

 below, fruit obsoletely tetragonous, densely and coarsely tuber- 

 culate. I. About Willis's, &c. ! Engineer Eoad ! II. ! III. ! 



Var. Magnolii P. L. Fruit more angular, ribs more visible, 

 but it hardly differs, and all I have gathered fit type best. 

 III. i. South slopes Queen of Spain's Chair and San Eoque, D. 

 ii. S. de Palm a, I). 



P. omdticaule B. & E. Bushy or heathy places on hills ; 

 locally frequent ; 3-5. Much smaller, usually stemless. III. i. 

 From Queen of Spain's Chair to Cork Wood Crags ! 



CTatcegus monogyna Jacq. Bushy places and woods ; frequent; 

 3-5. I. ! III.! Abundant in parts of Cork Woods and at foot of 

 Algeciras mountains, more rarely near summits ! 



[C. maura L. f. is now regarded as synonymous with last. It 

 is at most a form with narrow cuneate leaves, trilobed at apex 

 only. Good forms seem quite rare, but not confined to Eock.] 



G. brevispina Kunze. Similar places ; rare ? 3-5. Differs 

 from C. monogyna in little but purple-veined petals, and blood 



