45 



12. Leontodon autumnale L 



Common in low-lying regions, in and be^ond enclosed fieids, in 

 damp piaces (saltmarshes) or somewhat higher up in the hills, where 

 it mostly occurs as var. Taraxaci (L.). 

 Fl. July. Fr. August. 



13. Matricaria inodora L. var. phaeocephala Rupr. (var. horealis 



Rostr. Fær. Fl. p. 53). 



Occurs rather frequently. partly on sandy sea-shores and on rock- 

 ledges by the sea-shore and partly in sandy cultivated fieids not far 

 from the coast. The main species is not met with on the Færoes. 

 Fl. July — August. Fr. August — September. 



14. Senecio vulgaris L. 



Found here and there in enclosed fieids especially near houses. 



t Sonchus arvensis L. 



Accidentally introdueed on Syd.: Trangisvaag 1895 (Simmons). 



15. Tanacetum vulgare L. 



Rather common in inhabited phaces, especially in churchj'ards; 

 doubtless originally imported. 



Fl. August — September. Probably no fruit. 



16. Taraxacum croceum Dahlst. apud G. Andersson och H. 

 Hesselmann : Bidrag til kånnedomen om Spetsbergens och Beeren 

 Eilands karlvåxttlora. Bihang till k. svenska Vet.-Akad. Handlingar, 

 Bd. 26, Afd. III, Nr. 1, Stockholm 1900, p. 12. 



T. pahistre Rostr. I. c. p. 51, non DC; T. laevigatum Ostenf. 

 III, non (Willd.) DC. 



Common outside enclosed fieids, on ledges and in clefts of rocks 

 especially some way up in the hills. 



Mr. H. Dahlstedt, the well-known authority on Hieracinni has just 

 described this new species, which seems to be widely distributed in 

 the northern regions, as it is found in the Scandinavian mountains, in 

 Spitsbergen, in Iceland and in Greenland. It has been taken for T. pa- 

 histre (T. paludosiim) as well as for T. laevigatum which are hardly found 

 in the Arctic regions ; from tliem as well as from T. valgåre it seems 

 fairly distinct, but tliis question needs further investigation. 

 Fl. June— July. Fr. July— August. 



17. T. vulgare Schrk.; T. officinale Web. 



Apparently common in inhabited piaces and in enclosed fieids ; 

 we found it in several piaces. 



To this and not to T. erythrospermain Andrzej. 1 refer a peculiar 

 form from Sando : Sands, f. bipinnatifida (Rostr.) found and mentioned 

 b\' Rostrup (1. c. p. 51) ; it has large laciniate-bipinnatifid leaves with 

 many and small teeth, besides a well developed horn on the inner 

 involucral scales. 



