A FLORA OF GIBRALTAR AND THE NEIGHBOURHOOD 79 
province; 4-6. Leaves and sepals narrower, capsule narrower, 
attenuate above. I have not identified it. II. D. 
Eufragia viscosa Benth. Grass ol es; comm 
Wall! 
+Var. sitet) i. has bright yellow flowers, known from Eufragia 
by its short broad sepals. I. Hast slopes Middle Hill! III. i. 
Rocky slopes of San Roque, 
tBartsia aspera Lge. Dry rocky places; locally frequent; 8-9. 
A Portuguese species probably only a very scabrid form of the 
Pyrenean B. spicata Ram. III. ii. Tops of saocieeiiad whence 
Reverchon records i 
Odontites _tenuifolia Don var. australis Boiss. Dry bushy 
places ; rare? 7-9. Very slender, gia small, unilateral. The 
var. is a more glabrous form. III. ii. 8. de Palma, Rev 
OROBANCHACEZ. 
n this difficult order I have, as a rule, only mentioned 
Seulities from which specimens have er amed for me 
Prof. Beck, as well as citing those already recorded. It might 
be misleading to give their din ap distribution, though several 
species i probably quite 
Orobanche ena eke: Appar arently rare; 4-6. Corolla 
bluish, ater deflexed, much constricted below mouth. III. ii. 
ink 
- 
5B 
tf. macroglossa Beck has corolla square in lateral aspect. 
III. i. Cork Wood Crags! (my 1669, pars, ‘esée Beck). Con- 
founded with O. gracilis. 
. Rapwm-Geniste Thuill. Appears rare; 3-5. Larger than 
O. gracilis, with larger wider corolla, more uniformly brownish 
Winky fe, mae within? stigmas yellow. III. ii. S. de Palma, 
a ~ 
ii. Algecira ras, Beck. 
O. fetida Poir. Hither a species or the next often frequent 
in cornfields; 4-5. Corolla eep blackish crimson, 7-12 lines, 
filaments pilose below, dese 14-3} lines above base, stigmas 
described as yellow, but Prof. Beck thus names my specimens 
