48 A FLORA OF GIBRALTAR AND THE NEIGHBOURHOOD 
neglecta Roem. & Schult. Ditches and ees very 
common; 4-6. Near T. infesta Hoffm., of w some consider 
it a variety, but much taller, branched above only, with habit of 
T. Anthriscus Gmel. T. purpurea Guss. is a form with purple 
stem and fruit spines. I.! III.! 
— oes die L. Bushy oer and sentess re. ; 
? 3-6. Annual, short, much bra umbels small o 
sors sublateral podtinciaa es, fruit linear oblong, with long ‘spines, 
ut the middle part of the Rock, K., Boiss.,éc. III. ii. Alge- 
ciras, Bae A single plant by railway near  aquainst t! 
Orlaya platycarpos Koch. Sea a rare; 4-5. Annual, 
suberect, glabrous, involucres broad, hyaline, flowers white, 
broadly radiant. I.? K. Probably Neate! Cacsnd. LW. Hay 2. 
III. iii. East end of Bay, near the Guadarranque, K., D. 
O. maritima Koch. Sea sand; common; . Dwar, 
pubescent, involucre narrow, herbaceous, flowers small, pink, 
hardly radiant. I. Catalan Bay! North Front! I.! IL! 
Daou crinitus Desf. Grassy or sandy fields ee ea wick: : 
6; 6-7. Leaves glabrous, segments verticillate.. I. P II. 
Caninatcuae Common! Not in flower. ii. About Migeciend: Rev. 
D. Carota L. Grassy or rough hills and banks; common; 
4-7. Most variable; umbels flattish in ate concave in fruit, 
spines dist tinot, short or lon ng. D. maritimus Lamk., smaller and 
more slender, with thicker glabrous, ake: leaves, and D. masi- 
mus Desf., taller and stouter, with large broad leaves, and larger 
flowers but smaller fruit, are reduced fo varieties by Perez Lara. 
ones II! Sey ! My 1236 from railway near Algeciras may be 
D. en tir Lamk.? Rough 5 ae near sea; locally fre- 
quent ? 5-8. mbel convex in flower and fruit, branches 
divaricate, “i thicker, peduncles ata, ee spines short, 
confluent at base into a wing. The Gibraltar — ane except in 
ie _ does not differ from that of D. Car D. gingidiwm 
, synonymous, as Kelaart and Sesto say; it has a 
sonente umbel and different habit. I. Governor’s Seis 
Mediterranean Steps! 
D. muricatus L, Field borders and roadsides; very commo 
he pages large, very white, fruit with long slender ion 
Elaoselinum fetidum Boiss. Sandy flats and mountain 
slopes; common; 5-6. Tall, flowers yellow, leaves much divided, 
petioles hispid, involucre 0-1, involucel several, fruit dorsally 
compressed, with a broad hye which, as in Thapsia, is not 
developed till agecate dit ELE 
E. Asclepium Bert. (EH. seams Koch., H. tenwifolia Lge.). 
Heaths; rather rare; 6-7. Rather tall, slender, involucres 3-4, 
rays long, 8-12, leaves geet p7 divided, two lowest lobes short 
and directed downwards, e h lobe rat ther n narrow, ‘ripinnatiseet, 
ultimate — a peach narrow and apiculate. III. 
Northern slopes of Chair ! 
Thapsia villosa L, Bushy mountain slopes; locally common; 
