A FLORA OF GIBRALTAR AND THE NEIGHBOURHOOD 17 
Moenchia sistqueti Gay. Damp grassy and pee J aoe 
laces ; ee: 2-4, III. i and ii.! Reaches top of Que 
of Spain’s Chai 
Cerastium slomeratum Thuill. (C. viscosum L.).  Roadsides, 
waste ground, &c., very common; 2-5. Varies much in habit, 
often apetalous. gi tell dies 
rachypetalum Desp. Dry gravelly places; rare? 3. More 
slender, pedicels much longer, usually deflexed in fruit, claws of 
petals glabrous, or ciliate only at epee goa one-third longer 
than calyx. I. Mediterranean Steps! III. i. Path to First 
Pine Wood ! tres teste F. N. William 
. Boissiert Gren. Rocks and dé pris on mountains; the type, 
with densely white- ret hanes rare; 4-5. I. Near Green’s 
Lodge! 
fVar. gibraltaricum Gren., leaves green, but viscid, is com- 
Stellaria =_— Vill. In all situations; very common; 12-5. 
Ae es 2 a a 
pedicels and sepals, ane ay ee III. i. Malaga Gardens! 
7) 
s3 
5 
Sw wampy places, rare ; 3-5. III. i. Near 
summit of Queen of Spain’s Chair! 
Spergula arvensis L. Sandy and gravelly places; the type 
rare; 1- ii i, Algeciras, 
tVar. glutinosa Lge. is canescent and glandular; very com- 
III.! 
Spergularia rubra Pers. var. longipes Lge. Sandy fields; 
common; 1-6. Suberect, straggling, little or not glandular, 
internodes rather long, stipules narrow, inflorescence lax, leafy, 
flowers deep rose, seeds not winged. III.! 
iar. pinguis Fenzl. ec ha es Kind.). Stouter, 
leaves thicker, cymes gla ee flow and seeds larger. 
From the description and s onym y this is surely a var. of 
S. marina Wk. I. Sands at Cibralias A ALL, Ul, dccatiolas at 
Rev 
S. purpurea a Pers. (S. diandra Heldr.). Sandy ground; rare? 
3-5. Erect, slender, little branched, glabrous except cymes, 
leaves pase. short, owers large, deep rose, stamens 2-3. 
a1 D Marsh at Palmones Playazo!? This form 
is lee igh strict, leaves and internodes long, pedicels 
long, glandular, sepals very acute, glabrous, petals bright 
rose, stamens 2-5. Mr. G. C. Druce thinks it may belong 
+S. = trea Asch. al®: campestris Wk.?). Sandy ground; 
locally common; 4-5. Prostrate, densely branched, slender and 
wholly very enid, leaves very slender, cymes leafless, flowers 
JOURNAL OF Borany, Fes. 1914. [(SuppLEMENT] C. 
