THE BRITISH CAPREOLATE FUMITORIES 175 
Sussex ; Stourmouth, Kent; Tenby; Cardigan; Towyn; Anglesea; 
Holyhead ; Isle of Man; Sale and Claughton, Cheshire; Middleton 
and Little Kecleston, Lanes. ; Holy Island; Stranraer; Portpatrick, 
Wigton; near Glasgow; Kirkcaldy; and North Uist, 
iy ining name in the London Catalogue, F. murauis 
Sonder, appears to be now used in this country to designate a 
variety of Fumitories of rampant habit, and bearing small, pale 
flowers of capreolate-like form. A number of the specimens that 
scription being taken from a plant found by Sonder at Horn, near 
mburg ; its di 
“ Fructibus subrotundis-ovatis obtusis levibus, sepalis ovatis acu- 
minatis corolla dimidia brevioribus dentatis, racemis evolutis laxis, 
pedicellis patentibus, foliorum laciniis oblongo-lanceolatis lanceo- 
latisve. Habi 
This description is virtually repeated in Sonder’s Flora of 
Hamburg, the author in his additional remarks noting that the 
Lh) 
even then is, in my experience, variable and at times difficult to 
tecognize in dried specimens. In F. 
such as clearly exists in the case of F. confusa. The remaining and 
most reliable means of segregation, therefore, would appear to lie 
in the fruit, which in the British Museum specimens of F’. muralis 
from the “locus classicus” at Hamburg, is, as Koch and Jordan 
