58 A FLORA OF GIBRALTAR AND THE NEIGHBOURHOOD 
rea peduncles stouter, bracts more numerous. I. Western 
slope 
s. erraticus che Similar places; common? 6-10. Near S. 
aquaticus Huds., with lax paniculate, not _corymbose inflore- 
scence, leaves sarah iss divided than in last. II.!? III. i. and ii.! 
S. gallicus Chaix. Sand-dunes and light soil; het common; 
1-5. A rayed annual, inflorescence corymbose, le es all pinna 
tisect. The type (var. laxiflorus DC.) has an axtobhial in of 
short phyllaries. I. At and beyond Governor’s Cottage 
ar. exsquameus DC. mn no calyeule. III. i. and ii, Sand- 
and Palmones! Dautez says type and var. are 
petri te oi mixed. I tive found type only on the Rock, and 
only va 
. petreus B. & B.? Rocky slopes rare; 4-6. Annual, stout, 
rather tall, stem leaves entire, broadly amplexicaul, a some- 
times inciso-dentate, anthodes ~ and large. I.? Dasoi. This 
collector’s records are not relia 
tS. leucanthemifolius Poir. Raddy laces; rare; 3-4. A low 
annual, often much branched, leaves inciso-dentate, not lobed 
corymb few-headed, heads larger than those of S. gallicus. 
i k 
vig minutus DC. tvar. gibraltaricus Wk. Shady rocky places ; 
; 5-6. Heads few, rather large, on long subradical pedun- 
‘ite: ‘radical leaves dentate, cauline simply ret lobes linear, 
sometimes dentate. I. Lem.! Both sides c 0188.5 
c. Kelaart indicates the Gavbesiost s Cottage as its "habitat, 
where I have repeatedly searched in vain for it. 
S. lividus L. var. major G.& G. Shady stan’? ago rather 
I. Lem.! East slopes, Wk., mmit of 
Chair | Cork Woods! ii. Railside near pean: " Waterfall! 
S. vulgaris L. Fields, roadsides and waste places; very 
common; 1-12, but chiefly 12-8. I.! II.! III.! Reaches 
highest summits ! 
Calendula arvensis L. Open omny stony and grassy places, 
arely in mountains or woods; abundant; 11-5. St rictly annual, 
oft subsimple and low, sometimes bra Poked and straggling, | like 
a Outer fruits erect or incurved, lateral w wings broad, feed 
n back many, large, in two rows, usua i a he inside at 
Var : maslacitana P. I, cues half the size, ligules often not 
cited than phyllaries, fruit larger and more spinose. Debeaux 
admits the var. only, though it is much rarer than type, at least in 
good forms. I, Below Devil’s Gap! III. Rather frequent to 
C. stellata Cay. Rocky and stony slopes; locally common; 
3-5. Stout, — more straggling, — always annual, but 
often becoming woody at base, flower. s large as next, outer 
fruits stellately spreading, muricate, fo poem on back, wingless: 
or nearly so, no spur on face at base. I.! III. i. Alcadeza 
Crags!? Perhaps only large C. arvensis, I did not see fruit. 
