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328                          Giardina & al.: A catalogue of plants growing in Sicily




                Maritime sands and other dry places. – Unknown in Sicilian herbaria and treated as doubtful by
                Fl. Europ. 3: 220 (1972).
              1955. Scrophularia canina L., Sp. Pl.: 621 (1753) subsp. canina
                Crushed and stony ground. – Throughout mountains and hills. – C.
              1956. Scrophularia canina subsp. bicolor (Sm. in Sibth. & Sm.) Greuter in Boissiera 13:
                109 (1967) [Bas. S. bicolor Sm. in Sibth. & Sm., Fl. Graec. Prodr. 1: 437 (1809)]
                Screes, stony ground, sands. – Throughout on the coastland. – C.

              1957. Antirrhinum siculum Mill., Gard. Dict. ed. 8: n. 6 (1768)
                Cliffs, stony grounds, debris. – Throughout Sicily and also in the surraunding islands. – CC.

              1958. Antirrhinum majus L., Sp. Pl.: 617 (1753)
                Cliffs, stony grounds, debris, walls. – Escaped from cultivation and spontaneous in urban cen-
                tres, mainly in mountain. – C.
              1959. Antirrhinum tortuosum Bosc ex Lam., Encycl. Méth. Bot. 4: 365 (1797) [? Incl. A.
                compositum Lojac. in Naturalista Sicil. 2: 297 (1883)]
                Cliffs, walls. – Lago di Lentini (Lopriore 1900); Sicilia, Girgenti, Bisacquino, Cefalù (Lojacono
                1904); Girgenti al tempio di Giove (Zodda 1908); Pantelleria (Sommier 1922); Pantelleria: indi-
                cato per varie località ma sempre sub A. majus (Di Martino 1963); M. Pellegrino (Raimondo ed.
                1992). – NC.
              1960. Misopates orontium (L.) Raf., Autik. Bot.: 158 (1840) [Bas. Antirrhinum orontium
                L., Sp. Pl.: 615 (1753)]
                Fields, vineyards, uncultivated dry ground. – Throughout the region. – CC.
              1961. Misopates calycinum Rothm. in Feddes Repert. Spec. Nov. Regni Veg. (Beih.) 136:
                112 (1956)
                Fields, vineyards, uncultivated dry ground (mainly on limestone). – Throughout the
                region. – CC.

              1962. Chaenorhinum rupestre (Guss.) Speta in Stapfia 7: 25 (1980) [Bas. Linaria rupe-
                stris Guss., Fl. Sicul. Prodr. 2: 163 (1828); C. rubrifolium (Robill. & Castagne ex DC.)
                Fourr. f. rupestre (Guss.) R. Fern. in Bot. J. Linn. Soc. 64(2): 226 (1971)]
                Gypsum cliffs. – Montallegro, Siculiana, Mineo (Gussone 1828); Agrigento, Portella delle Api,
                Passofonduto, Acquaviva, Campofranco (Lojacono 1904); Villafrati, Todaro (W), -Montallegro,
                Gussone (G) (Speta 1980); Colline presso Milena, Casteltermini, Strada per Sutera, Realmonte
                (Brullo & al. 1989); Sutera (Raimondo & al. 2004). – R.

              1963. Chaenorhinum minus (L.) Lange in Willk. & Lange, Prodr. Fl. Hisp. 2: 577 (1870)
                [Bas. Antirrhinum minus L., Sp. Pl.: 617 (1753)]
                Cliffs. – Reported for Sicily by Zangheri (1976), but doubtful according to Pignatti (1982, 2: 542)
                and Fl. Europ. 3: 226 (1972). Ignored by Fiori (1924) and by previous authors, but perhaps to be
                searched. – ?RR.
              1964. Linaria vulgaris Mill., Gard. Dict., ed. 8., n. 1. (1768)
                Nebrodi presso Monte Sambuchetti, su terreni silicei ai margini del cerreto (Raimondo
                & Bazan 2007); Territorio di Enna (Di Martino PAL).
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