A FLORA OF GIBRALTAR AND THE NEIGHBOURHOOD 103 
. 
quantity by the path to Rocadillo, which is now all cultivation 
and I think it is exterminated ! 
ale L 
, 
[I. A few specimens at Willis’s and Ince 
1883!) III. i. Punta Mala! Campo Common! 
Carregnoa humilis J. Gay. Similar places; very rare; 10. 
III. i. Carteian Hills near Puente Mayorga! Near Almoraima, D. 
Pancratium maritimum L. Sand dunes by sea; locally 
abundant; 7-9. I. North Front! II.! IIL! 
Corbularia Bulbocodium Haw. Rocks on tops of mountains ; 
locally common; 12-3. III. ii. On all the highest ridges! 
Narcissus serotinus L. Gravelly places; rather frequent; 
10-11. Tall forms with 2-4 flowers are var. major P. L. III. i. 
Campamento Common to Pindalista! Alcadeza Plain! Probably 
elsewhere, but not seen in flower. 
N. viridiflorus Schousb. Damp gravelly and clayey places ; 
frequent; 9-10. In 1883 I gathered on Campo Common, bier 
near Algeciras ! 
N. niveus Lois. Rough bushy places or marshy ground; 
common, locally abundant; 10-3. On the Rock this grows in dry 
i 
Spain it 
It varies 
gave americana L. is very extensively planted, and has 
become so well naturalised here and there on the Rock and in 
Spain as almost to deserve inclusion. 
DIoscoRACE. 
Tamus communis L. Bushy and wooded places; rather 
frequent: 2-5. I.! III. i. and ii.! Common in the mountains ° 
SMILACEH. 
Smilax aspera L. Bushy ground; frequ 
hever seen the type, which has red fruit (S. 
ent? 9-1. I have 
rubra Willd. ?), but 
to vary too indefi- 
ebeaux says it is common. e leaves seem 
nitely to afford specific characters. I. K., D. 
ar. mauritanica , with black fruit, 1s comm 
i i ivi tion 
the common species of the Italian Riviera, though by deseript 
; hould be later than in the type. The forms require elucidation. 
-! TIT.) 
a much broader than 
all ii. 
| . . t trees. . 
t; 9-4. [I. Ala- 
