A FLORA OF GIBRALTAR AND THE NEIGHBOURHOOD 5 
pedicels and smaller flowers in a lax raceme. From other species 
it differs in very broad sepals, lax, usually few-flowered racemes, 
deflexed: lower petal, and smoothish fruit. I.! I1I.! Common 
everywhere ! 
F. Bastardi Bor. Similar situations! rare; Low 
petals with  seace magins, upper laterally compressed, fruit 
subglobose. I. ‘an . D. North Front Gardens! III. i. Road 
[F. iiaiae Sond. and F. Bor@i Jord. ‘are reported 
Gibraltar and San Roque. Mr. Pugsley thinks they are Ssttainty 
forms of F’. septwm.] 
rartia Lag. Roadsides and hedges; locally frequent ; 
2-5 apreolata in yellowish colour of flowers, but th 
are larger, ver adly winged, pedicels erect or spreading, 
and arge, coarsely rugose. I. and Ince’s Farms ! 
e. ruc 
II. i. Linea! Campamento! Puente Mayorga! Carteian Hills! 
Near First Pine Wood! ii. Railway, &., about Algeciras! 
+F. arundana Boiss. A shade form of F. rupestris B. & RB. 
(teste Pugsley). Rocky ground; rare; 3-5. Allied to last, but 
flo fer narrow, very broadly winged, sepals narrow, an 
ag 
ed ground; rare; 
Leaf whee narrow, flowers small, dull coloured, upper petals 
with psig not ascending, ae lower decidedly spathu- 
z: 
late, fruit small, truncate or enarginate. I. Rare, 
Abundant sbous San Regis and Algeciras, K. By Pinar de los 
Bigote 
F. Si viilord Lamk. Similar places; rare; 2-5. Leaf seg- 
ments narrow-linear, sepals minute, fruit rounded or subacute. 
I. Boiss. Kelaart ri this species is ‘‘ not quite so common ” on 
the Rock as F’. capreolata. It appears to be very rare, but is 
abundant saierlice & in the Province. 
CRUCIFERZ. 
Malcolmia littorea R. Br. Sand dunes near the sea; abundant; 
1-7, or occasionally the whole year. I. Alameda (herb. Bales- 
trino !). as is not likely to occur there now. Il.! HI! 
it runs as ‘type. and broad leaves are not always associated with 
eeper sinuation. I.! II.! 
M. lacera DC. Similar situations ; rare; 2-6. I. Maritime 
sands at Gibraltar, Wk., Winkl. This might be at Catalan Bay, 
North Front, or Neutral Ground. 
+Matthiola sinuata R. Br. een situations; rare; 5-6. 
Il. Near the frontier line, D. III. i. Sand d 
+M. tricuspidata R. Br. Similar situations locally common ; 
3-6. I. North Front! II.! III. i. Foot of San Roque 
[Hesperis matronalis Lamk. Found on the Rock by Lemann, 
but probably a garden escape.] 
Sisymbrium officinale Scop. Roadsides, fields, and waste 
