56 A FLORA OP GIBRALTAR AND THE NEIGHBOURHOOD 



entire lobes, peduncles very long, ray white, becoming carmine. 

 III. i. By Second Pine Wood ! 



Chrysanthemum segetum L. Cornfields ; common ; 4-5. 

 Leaves, at least lower, trifid, lobes deeply incised. I. Abundantly 

 in gardens, K. III. ! 



Pinardia coronaria Less. Eoadsides, banks and fields ; very 

 common ; 3-6. Eay pale yellow, or deep yellow towards base, or 

 wholly deep yellow, the latter the rarest. I. ! II. ! III. ! 



]P. anisocejjhala Cass. Sand-dunes; locally abundant; 4-6. 

 Tall, glandular viscid, with entire or toothed leaves. III. ii. 

 and iii. Guadacorte and Palmones Sands, both sides of Eiver! 

 " Mountains above Algeciras," B. £ B., doubtless a misuse of 

 collectors' printed labels. 



\Coleostephus Myconis B. & E. Sandy fields; rare, but 

 perhaps mistaken for Chrysanthemum segetum ; 3-5. A glabrous 

 yellow-rayed annual, leaves acutely serrate, achenes with a 

 tubular crown. I. Sandy fields, K. III. ii. Near shore at 

 Algeciras, B. d B. 



'''Artemisia i^ontica L. Fields ; frequent ; 7-10. Ashy green, 

 herbaceous, 12-18 in. high, leaves short, bipinnatifid, segments 

 linear, heads small, hemispherical, bright yellow. I have only 

 seen very late specimens, and have not collected it. I think 

 much more general than my notes show. [I. A doubtful native, 

 D.] III. i. Carteian Hills, especially near Francia's Farm ! 

 iii. About Los Barrios Station ! 



iHelichrysum rupestre DC. var. Boissieri Wk. {H. Fontanesii 

 Camb.). Eocks ; locally frequent ; 5-6. Stems few or solitary, 

 leaves broadly linear, corymbs and heads rather large, phyllaries 

 glabrous. The description emphasises that all phyllaries are as 

 long as florets ; they are certainly not so in our plant, and hardly 

 difi'er from those of H. Stcechas. The plant is said to be 

 inodorous. I have not tested this. I. All over upper Eock, 

 especially on precipices ! 



H. decumhens Camb. Eocks ; rare ; 5-6. Much smaller and 

 more decumbent, leaves close set, shorter, soon reflexed, heads 

 smaller, fewer, deeper yellow. I. Boiss. ! 



-H". Stcechas DC. Eocky slopes ; locally common ; 5-7. Like 

 H. rupestre, but strongly aromatic, much more caespitose and 

 many-stemmed, leaves much narrower, heads smaller, in smaller 

 clusters, often paler yellow. III. i. Cork Wood Crags! Alcadeza 

 Crags ! 



H. serotinum Boiss. {H. angustifoUum DC). Sand-dunes ; 

 locally frequent; 7-9. Densely cgespitose, many-stemmed, leaves 

 very narrow, anthodes smaller and more cylindrical than in other 

 species, outer phyllaries woolly on back. Leaves canescent or 

 quite green. III. ii. and iii. About Palmones, on both sides of 

 Eiver ! 



Gnaphalium luteo-album L. Sandy places ; occasional ; 3-8. 

 I. North Front, near Catalan Bay, D. III. i. Along the Lajo ! 

 Almoraima ! Alcadeza ! ii. ! iii. Salt Pans ! 



Filago germanica L. Fields and waste places ; rare ? 5-6. 



