R. BROWN’S LIST OF MADEIRA PLANTS 5 
R. J nt ie Lowe, wets hy (1881) ee in Steen Journ. Bot. 
1851) ; Fl. Mad.; 3 (1857), non C. A. Meyer 
R. ertuaflie Hook. Bot. Mag. t. 4625 et deser. parti, non 
CHELIDONIUM MAIUs. 
Foumaria orricinauis [F. muralis Sond. a vulgaris Lowe]. 
gene PERENNE [Lapistrum rugosum ‘ ee Lowe, FI. 
Mad. i This name, like many others in the list, is not cited 
in fu. Kew. j 
M. ce Seb geed fruticosa L. oe See redo FI. — ; 89, 
where M. t l.in Herb. Banks onym 
nt VIRGINICU 
EARIA CoRONOPIFOLIA [a slip for C. Coronopus = Coronopus 
Ruellii All. (1785), C. -aiabeetois Gilib. (178 1 
Iseris nupicauuis [Teesdalia nudicaulis 
Sisymprium Nasturtium [Rovipa Nutsbaeil Beck. Fl. Nieder- 
idee 468 (1892).] 
YSIMUM OFFICINALE Tee ane pete Scop.] 
Cuemanruus irroreus [Lowe (Fl ge ii 28) aoe this 
with his Mathiola maderensis; I find d no Madeiran plant bear aring 
n plan 
the name in the Herbarium. C. littoreus (Malcomia littorea Br.) is 
not recorded as a Madeiran plant.] 
[This was the name employed by Solander when 
first describing the plant for the Hortus Kewensts, in which, on 
publication, the name CU. mutabilis L’ Hérit. (Stirp. Nov. p. 92) was 
adopted. 
C. penratus. [This, as — says (Fl. Mad, i. 28), is merely a 
more hoary roa ahaa nahi m of C., mutabdilis. 
C. rexurrotius. [This name was adopted by L’ sti AC y 
from the Banksian Herbarium, where he was oki Ik 
both this and C. mutabilis are cstablished on Masson’s sieditai. 3 
Hespenrts pirrusa. [This and Sinapis rrutescens= Sinapodendron 
frutescens Lowe itera frutescens Ait. Hort. Kew. ii. met ; the 
st.] 
AraBis aupina [4. sitiad Stev.] 
Brassica murauis. [This isin Brown's and Masson’s M8. lists, but 
I find no specimen, nor does Lowe recognize it as a Madeiran plant. J 
B, rrutescens [Sinapodendron salicifolium Lowe, Prim. 37 | (1831) 
(S. ri bgp nse Lowe, Fl. Mad. 80 (1857); Sinapis seapustjole DC. 
Syst. ii. 624 (1821)). If, as seems probable, Lowe’s genus Sina 
podendron consists of one variable species, the name for ee sogrogato 
under Brassica will be B. frutescens Sol. ex DC. Syst. ii. 624.) 
SrnaPis FRUTESCENS [see above under Hesperis. | 
S. mvcana Mass. [This appears in Brown’s MS. as “8. incana 
L. ?’’: the name is notin Masson’s list. The reference is, I think, 
to a specimen of S, frutescens grown at Kew in 1778 from Madeiran 
seeds, in which Solander has noted ‘‘Sinapis ? incana ? ep. specimen 
Masson.” Lowe (Fl. Mad. 27) considers Brassica nigra as ‘ un- 
doubtedly the plant intended by Von Buch and others in their 
lists of Mad. plants under the name of S. incana L.’’ But it will 
be observed that in Buch’s list it stands as ‘‘S. incana Mass.,” and 
I find no Madeiran specimen of B. nigra collected by him.] 
