Chapter 7: Linnaean Plant Names and their Types (part C) Author Jarvis, Charlie Department of Botany, Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London, UK text 2007 Linnaean Society of London in association with the Natural History Museum London Order out of Chaos. Linnaean Plant Types and their Types 370 473 book chapter https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.291971 978-0-9506207-7-0 291971 Conyza candida Linnaeus , Species Plantarum 2 : 862. 1753 . "Habitat in Creta." RCN: 6229. Lectotype (Greuter in Willdenowia 33: 242. 2003): [icon] " Jacobaea Cretica incana integro limonii fol. " in Barrelier, Pl. Galliam: 95, t. 217. 1714. - Epitype (Greuter in Willdenowia 33: 243. 2003): Greece. Crete, Gramvousa, Kissamos, in latere austro-orientali arcis veterae, 50-100m, 25 Jul 1973, Stamatiadou 17335 in Soc. Ech. Pl. Vasc. Eur. Occid. Bassin Medit . No. 7061 (G; iso- widely distributed). Current name: Inula candida (L.) Cass. ( Asteraceae ). Note: Lacaita (in Nuovo Giorn. Bot. Ital. , n.s., 28: 127-132. 1921) provided a detailed discussion of most of the original elements (though he failed to trace the Clifford material), and the confusion resulting from Linnaeus' later (1763) modification of his species concept. Greuter (in Boissiera 13: 140. 1967) designated a Tournefort polynomial (acceptable under the Code in force at that time) as lectotype , wrongly interpreted by Kit Tan & al. (in Taxon 52: 358. 2003) as a typification using Tournefort material in Paris. Greuter (2003) refuted this interpretation and formally designated a lectotype and epitype .