A FLORA OF GIBRALTAR AND THE NEIGHBOURHOOD 105 
0. kt Gawl. Sandy heaths; frequent, locally abundant; 
3-5. . Fl. p. 161.] III. i. and ii.! Reaches high up 
ae 
0. wbellatum as var. lonpshenane Wk. Bushy or sandy 
places, and in s; common; 2-4. I. Levant! Near Mon- 
key’s Cave! Hisesin Flats! Above Haynes’s Cave! III! 
Reaches top of El — py 
Scilla verna Huds. var. major s. (S. Ramburer ae 
Rough oes and bondi prvssstd ‘cams but nant 2-4, 
Taller than type, flowers many, racemose, no eeorsmboss 
anthers blue. I. Rock Gun! Below Signal Station | IIL. i 
Almoraima! Second Pine Wood! ii. or ares Some! Pa. mones 
Pinar and Heath! iii. Guadarranque Mars 
mispherica Boiss. Rough slopes on “Rock, and marshes 
in Spain ; locally very common; 3-4. I. Mediterranean Steps! 
Governor’s Cott tage! North-west slopes! III.! Rare in i.! 
S. ieeeephylia: ee: (S. pumila Brot.). Woods; locally abun- 
dant; 1- 2 . Queen of Spain’s Chair! Cork Woods! 
ii. Mounta 
8S. cutuminali L. Sandy places; abundant; 9-10. 1! III.! 
Not se n Il. -_ I have not been there in its eyed time, 
Kelaart to form ares beds by the road to San Roque, but it is a 
greenish, but aan turn pe vermilion on si rs 
the origin of U. fulvus tony which is described as_ hav ne 
ees 01 or orange flowers? 1. Mediterranean Steps! Levant! 
ITI. ! 
Muscari comosum Mill. Sandy and grassy fields ; common ; 
3-4. I. Below Victoria Battery and above Alameda, Lem. 
“estas ppt Kunth. oon nds and bushy hills ; ere 
locally common ; ee a . i, Queen of Spain’s Chair and else- 
Where! ii. Mountai 
d.) 
alls; 
Asphodelus fistulosus L. Dry sandy soil, rocks, and old walls; 
locally -aplade Hee i ! "a Front! IJ.! IIL. i. 8. Carbo- 
he tee 
Salt Pan 
. macrocar, u rie Rocky slopes, fields, and woods; very 
Semon; 1 rib reed ways ine, coal nehed, bracts pale, rather 
are or twice as 
narrow, Slaments pane to middle, claws bin nes wide, central 
