ANDRYALA. 
563 
1. e. A. erecta /3. albida fol. omnibus lanceolatis integris Sol. ! 
MSS. 5 A. efecta MSS. (3, Madeira Fr. Masson 1777 Sol. ! in 
BH. A. glandulosa Lam. Diet. i. 154 ; Illust. t. 657. f. 1. — Mad. 
on P ta de S. Loureni^o here and there •with subv. 1 : u sea- 
cliff’s at top beyond the Louros, S. Gon^allo ” E. of Funchal, 
S r Moniz, approaching in foliage the less tomentose sinuate- 
toothed forms of (3, subv. 2 ; P ta Ferrovo (S. Jorge) and else- 
where on the N. coast plentifully ; PS. reg. 4, on all the rocky 
peaks, especially on the N. side of the top of Pico do CTastello, 
remote from the sea and 1400 ft. above it. 
[3. sparsiflora ; viscous and fulvo-viilous upwards only ; 1. all 
lanceolate-acuminate ; cyme compound, lax, stiffly spreading, 
widely fork-branched, inconspicuously leafy or merely bracteate 
at the forks, branches and ped. subelongate or slender, heads 
remote or distinct, ligules somewhat long and narrow. — A. 
varia oc. (subvarr. 1, 2) and y (subvarr. 1, 2) Lowe in litt. et 
MSS. olim (1831-2). A. varia oc, (3 and A. crithmifolia (not 
Ait.) Novit. 540 or 18. A. varia y, 8, e, £ DC. ! vii. 246. A. 
cheiranthifolia Herit., Spr. (not Pers.). A. pinnatifida and A. 
denudata Sol. ! in BH. ; Buch ! 194, nos. 235, 236. Rothia 
cheiranthifolia. and ? R. picroides Reichenb. in Holl's List. — 
Mad. r eg. 1-4, chiefly 2-4. 
Subv. 1. integrifolia ; 1. all undivided subentire or minutely 
remotely and inconspicuously repand-denticulate. — A. varia a 
(subv. 1, 2) Lowe in litt. et MSS. olim ; A. varia ot Novit. 1. c. ; 
A. varia y, 8 DC. ! 1. c. A. denudata Sol. ! MSS. and BH. 
(Madeira Fr. Masson 1777); Buch! 194. no. 236. Rothia 
picroides Rchb. in Hoiks List P — Rocks and dry rocky banks 
in Mad. everywhere, especially from 1500 to 5000 ft. ; about 
and above the Mount, in chestnut-woods about the Jardim, 
above P t0 da Cruz, in the Serra d’Agua, Rib. de S ta Luzia, Rib. 
Frio, da Metade, de S. Jorge, &c. ; S. Vicente from the beach 
or sea-cliffs upwards; at “ Jardim do Mar and Raba^al ” 
S r Moniz. June-Sept. — Varies in shady places or on moist 
rocks with 1. more thin or membranous naked or glabrescentlv 
pale mealy greenish (var. a, subv. 1 montana Lowe in litt. et 
MSS. olim = var. y. subglabrata DC. ! 1. c. = A. denudata Sol. ! 
in BII. et MSS. and Buch ! 11. cc.), and on hot exposed dry 
rocks or at a lower elevation through innumerable intermediate 
gradations to .more densely tomentose and hoary, the latter 
being var. a (subv. 2. aprica ) Lowe in litt. et MSS. olim = var. 8. 
aprica DC. ! 1. c. The seeds of the former of these two states, 
which is in fact the ordinary mountain form of the sp., cult, in 
England at Margate in 1830 by my friend the Rev. M. ,T. 
Berkeley, produced for the most part pi. with the more or less 
pinnatifid or sinuately inciso-toothed 1. of the following- subv. 2. 
