CRUCIFER. 139 
Flowers pale yellow, veined, # inch across, in a very short raceme, 
which lengthens as the fruit ripens. Pedicels about as long as the 
calyx in flower, eee than the beak of the pod in fruit. Pods 
slightly beaded, 2 + inches in length including the beak, which 
is from 3 to 2 oe a is of the same thickness as the pod at 
its base where it contains seeds, but terminates in a subulate point 
where it is empty. Seeds oblong, dark brown, finely punctured. 
Whole plant very glaucous and glabrous; the stem sometimes 
with a few hairs. 
Sun-Srecies Il.—Brassica Cheiranthus. Vil. 
Pirate XCII.* 
ftewh. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. Il. Veér. Tab. XCI. Fig. 4433. 
Sinapis Cheiranthus, Koch. Eng. Bot. Sup. 2821, et Auct. Plur. 
Leaves hispid. Stem hispid, branched, leafy. 
On the sandy seashore at St. Aubin’s Bay, Jersey, and in 
Alderney. 
Channel Islands. Perennial. Summer. 
Extremely like the preceding sub-species, but taller; the stem 
being from 1 to 3 feet high. The plant is less glaucous and more 
hispid ; and the leaves, instead of being arranged in a rosette, are 
scattered on the stem. 
Sus-Genus III.—DIPLOTAXIS. D.C. 
Sepals slightly spreading, often hairy. Seeds ovoid-compressed, 
arranged in a double row down each cell of the pod. 
Diplotaxis, from dudooe (diploos) double, and rakte (tawis), a series ; because of the 
seeds being disposed in two rows in each cell. 
SPECIES VIII—BRASSICA TENUIFOLIA. Bois. 
Prate XCIII.t+ 
Diplotaxis tenuifolia, Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. IL Zetr. Tab. LX XXII. 
Fig. 4420. 
Diplotaxis tenuifolia, D.C., et Auct. Plur. 
Sisymbrium tenuifolium, Linn. Sm. Eng. Bot. No. 525. 
Sinapis tenuifolia, Sm. Eng. Bot. Vol. IIL p. 223. 
Stem sub-frutescent at the base. Leaves numerous, not in a 
radical rosette, the lower ones pinnatifid. Pedicels longer than 
the flowers when fully open. 
* The Plate is E. B. S. 2821, unaltered. 
t The Plate is E. B. 525, with a pod added by Mr. J. E. Sowerby, 
