292 
what palmately 7-lobed: middle lobe long, toothed, or lobed ; 
peduncles long, 1-flowered, articulated; sepals ovate, acute. 
y.. G. Native of China. Plant rather hispid, green. Brac- 
teas subulate. Corolla large, reddish purple. 
Bryony-leaved Bind-weed. Fl. July, Aug. 
Pl. tw. 
98 C. FA'rkra (Jacq. hort. schroenbr. 2. t. 198.) root per- 
pendicular ; stems numerous, much branched ; leaves petiolate, 
ovate-cordate, deeply jagged, rather pilose on both surfaces ; 
peduncles hairy, very long, 1-flowered ; calyx villous; sepals 
ovate, concave, acute: outer ones broader. 2t. ^. G. Native 
of the Cape of Good Hope. Poir. suppl. 3. p. 462. Leaves 1-2 
inches long. Bracteas lanceolate, acute. Corolla campanulate, 
with a short white tube, and a flat, 5-lobed, pale flesh-coloured 
limb, rather hairy outside. Stigmas thick, cylindrical, obtuse. 
Falkia Bind-weed. Pl. twining. 
99 C. arcrrróLrUus (Lam. ill. no. 2096.) hairy; leaves all 
deeply jagged, somewhat palmate ; peduncles few-flowered, 
longer than the leaves. Y%.? ^. G. Native of the Cape of 
Good Hope. Flowers red ?. 
Alcea-leaved Bind-weed. 
twining. 
100 C. Tuunse’rett (Roem. et Schultes, syst. 4. p. 268.) stems 
tomentose; cauline leaves palmately and hastately Jagged, hairy ; 
peduncles articulated, usually 1-flowered, length of leaves, or 
shorter; sepals lanceolate, acuminated. %.? ^. G. Native 
of the Cape of Good Hope. Segments of leaves acute; middle 
one the longest, and sinuated. 
Thunberg’s Bind-weed. PI. tw. 
101 C. macroca’rrus (Lin. spec. 222.) leaves palmately 
pedate, 5-parted; peduncles 1-flowered. (2. ^. S. Native of 
Martinico. Desr. in Lam. dict. 3. p. 544. Willd. spec. 1. p. 
864. C. frutéscens, Mill. dict. no. 13. t. 56.—Plum. ed. Burm. 
amer. p. 80. t. 91. f. 1. Root thick, fleshy, turnip-formed. 
Lobes of leaves entire, acute; the lateral ones not so deep. 
Peduncles articulated in the middle, winged. Sepals concave, 
roundish. Corolla large, purplish, having the margin sinuated. 
Capsule globose, angular, size of a walnut, inclosed in the calyx. 
Seeds round, black, villous, size of filberts. 
Large-fruited Bind-weed. Fl. July, 
Pl. tw. 
102 C. quixqusrórius (Lin. syst. 170. spec. p. 166.) stem 
hispid; leaves digitate, glabrous; leaflets 5-toothed ; pedun- 
cles smooth, 3-7-flowered. ©. ^. S. Native of tropical Ame- 
rica. Desr. in Lam. dict. 3. p. 566. Willd. spec. 1. p. 865. 
Vabl. eclog. 2. p. 15.  Plukn. alm. 116. t. 167. f. 6.— Plum. 
ed. Burm. t. 91. f, 2.—Plum. mss. 2. t. 55. therefore Conv. 
pentaphyllus, 6, Lin. spec. 166. Willd. spec. 1. p. 866. Conv. 
palmatus, Mill. dict. no. 8. Sepals oval-oblong. Corolla cam- ` 
panulate, white, 5-toothed. 
Five-leaved Bind-weed. Fl. July, Aug. Clt. 1752. 
twining. 
103 C. crA'BER (Aubl. guian. 1. p. 138. t. 53.) quite gla- 
brous; leaves digitately quinate; leaflets petiolulate, attenuately 
acuminated, quite entire; peduncles branched, divaricate, many- 
flowered ; sepals long, firm, smooth, acute. 21. C. S. Native 
of Cayenne. Willd. spec. 1. p. 866. Desr. in Lam. dict. 3. p. 
566. Corolla white, with a long tube, and spreading limb ; 
lobes of limb rounded. Lobes of stigma acute. 
Glabrous Bind-weed. Fl.? Clt. 1806. Pl. tw. 
104 C. Ertospe’rmus (Desr. in Lam. dict. 3. p. 567.) gla- 
brous ; leaves digitate; leaflets generally 8, linear, very narrow ; 
racemes small, somewhat secund in the forks of the branches, a 
little longer than the leaves; sepals obtuse; seeds very hairy. 
hk. ^. S. Native of St. Domingo. Branches grey. Corolla 
Cit. 1802. 
Fl. July, Aug. Cit. 1823. PI. 
Aug. Clt. 1752. 
Pi. 
CONVOLVULACE&. 
XVI. Convotvutus. 4 
cylindrical, purplish. 
seeds white, silky. 
Woolly-seeded Bind-weed. Shrub tw. 
105 C macroca‘tyx (Ruiz. et Pav. fl. per. 2. p. 10. t. 118, 
f.a. Poir. suppl. 3. p. 471.) glabrous ; leaves quinate ; leaflets 
unequal, oblong-lanceolate, quite entire; peduncles very long, 
racemosely forked; sepals ovate-lanceolate. 2/.^. G. Native 
of Peru, in groves. Bracteas of the pedicels subulate. Calyx 
large, purplish, spreading. Corolla white; having the tube 
length of the calyx, and the lobes of the limb hardly acute. 
Stamens exserted. Stigmas flat, ex icon. 
Large-calyxed Bind-weed. PI. tw. 
106 C. Cuite’nsts (Pers. ench. 1. p. 180.) downy ; leaves 
deeply 5-parted; segments linear, unequal, diverging, acute: 
middle one long, rather undulated : the rest short, marked by the 
tooth in the middle; peduncles 1-flowered, shorter than the 
leaves, bearing 2 small bracteas at apex; calyx villous. ©.? 
Y.? O.F. Native of Chili. Corolla campanulate, spreading, 
red; tube a little longer than the calyx; segments of the limb 
ovate, mucronate. Lobes of stigma elongated. Seeds black. 
Capsule globose. 
Chili Bind-weed. PI. tw. 
107 C. arocxwoipzs (Cham. et Schlecht, in Linnea, 5. p. 
117.) herbaceous, clothed with villous, stellate down, intermixed 
with short, black, glandular hairs; the hairs on the upper sur- 
face of the leaves 3-parted ; leaves ternate: leaflets oblong- 
ovate, acuminated, acute; peduncles longer than the leaves, 3-7- 
flowered ; sepals ovate, long-acuminated, acute. ©. ^. G. 
Native of Mexico, near Hacienda de la Laguna. Corolla small, 
half an inch long, short, blue. 
Apocynum-like Bind-weed. | Pl. tw. 
108 C. nErrAPHY/LLUS (Willd. act. am. nat. cur. 4. p. 196. 
Roem. et Schultes, syst. 4. p. 271.) glabrous; leaves digitate; 
leaflets 4, linear-lanceolate: the 2 outer ones bipartite: pedun- 
cles generally 1-flowered. ©.? ^. S. Native of the East 
Indies. 
Seven-leaved Bind-weed. 
Capsule ovate, smooth. Hairs on the 
Pl. tw. 
§. 4. Leaves cordate or subcordate, entire. 
flowered. 
Peduncles many- 
109 C. nummuza‘rius (Vahl, eclog. 1. p. 13.) villous ; leaves 
cordate, mucronate; peduncles many-flowered, longer than the 
leaves; sepals ovate ; bracteas lanceolate. (2. ^. S. Native 
of South America. Stems terete. Leaves nearly like those of 
Lysimachia némorum. The 3 outer sepals foliaceous, broadly 
ovate, acuminated, villous: the 2 inner ones smaller, oblong, 
acuminated. Corolla campanulate, entire. 
Moneynort-leaved Bind-weed. Pl. tw. 
110 C. Ramosissima (Poir. suppl. 3. p. 468.) leaves cordate, 
quite entire; stem filiform ; peduncles many-flowered, umbel- 
lately cymose; bracteas subulate. ©.? ^. S. Native of 
Peru, towards Pozuzo. Conv. cymósus, Ruiz. et Pav. fl. per. 
2. p. 9. t. 117. f. b. Pers. ench. 1. p. 178. Stem much 
branched. Hairs deciduous. Leaves on long petioles, acumi- 
nated, 2-3 inches long, shining above. Peduncles bifid, 5-17- 
flowered. Stamens exserted. Stigmas flat. ; 
Much-branched Bind-weed. Pl. tw. 
111 C. Caxanrz'vsrs (Mill. dict. no. 16. Lin. spec. p. 121.) 
stems terete, villous; leaves cordate, downy, oblong, acute; pe- 
duncles many-flowered, longer than the petioles; calyx villous ; 
segments acute. 2. ^. G. Native of the Canary Islands. 
Desr. in Lam. dict. 3. p. 556. Willd. spec. l. p. 858. Sims, 
bot. mag. t. 1228.—Comm. hort. 2. p. 101. t. 51.—Plukn. 
alm. 114. t. 325. f. 1. Leaves permanent, soft, white beneath. 
