A FLORA OF GIBRALTAR AND THE NEIGHBOURHOOD xiii 
Hist. Nat., vol. ii. H 
records, but the later ones of Reverchon, Winkler, Dautez, and 
oted 
name “ Neutral Ground,” though not actually used by Perez 
Lara, also has led to confusion. 
Perez 
though the latter was specially devoted to the flora of Gibraltar 
and its neighbourhood. The total records for the whole province 
are 1905 species, and after making due allowance for excluded 
species, doubtful records, naturalized aliens, and those reduced to 
varieties, there are the following records for our region :— 
For the whole region. te Bas 
For Gibraltar only : ,  *462 
These totals are doubtless larger than they should be, because 
I have included all species known for our region which Perez 
Lara specifies as common in the whole province, without giving 
any detailed stations. Some of these are certainly rare with us, 
a few are not recorded, and quite a number are not known for the 
Rock: these last I have, of course, not included in the totals, It 
is highly probable that no station within our limits was known to 
Perez for many of the others, but have been unable to 
discriminate, so had no alternative but to include all that I knew 
to exist with us. : : 
Synopsis de. la Flore de Gibraliar was published by 
i Lin. Bordeaux, vol. xlvii. The 
, h e commoner. 
remarks also lose much of their value from the obscurity of his 
topography ; le 
precipice, with St. Geo : 
Rane as O’Hara’s Tower but now demolished. I have not, 
therefore, availed myself of the special localities given 1D that 
