aes TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Cissus. 
many fathoms, young shoots, villous. Tendrils leaf-opposed, from 
two to three.cleft.— Leaves alternate, petioled, ternate, Leaflets oval, 
grossly serrate, downy, from two to three inches long.— Petioles 
round, downy.—Stipules oblong, caducous.—Cymes as in the former 
species.—£/owers small, white.— Berry black, four-seeded. — 
9. C. setosa, R. 
Herbaceous, scandent, bristly. Leaves sessile, ternate ; leaflets 
grossly bristle-serrate. Berries one-seeded. 
; Teling. Barubutsali. 
A native of forests and hedges in the Rajamundree Circar. Fiow- 
ering time the rainy season. ; 
Root fusiform, perennial.— Stems herbaceous, succulent, round, 
‘striated, and covered with distinct, glandular, round-headed, white 
bristles, as is every part of the plant, even to the fruit.—Tendrils leaf- 
‘opposed, generally two-cleft.— Leaves alternate, sessile, ternate, rare- . 
ly quinate. Leaflets, the lateral two (or four, when there are five) 
are sessile, the middle one is shor'-petioled ; all are oval, waved, fleshy, 
irregularly and grossly bristle serrate, both sides armed with the fore- 
mentioned bristles, size various, from one to five inches long.—Sti- 
pules cordate.—Cymes as in the former species. — Petals revolute. 
Obs. Every part of the plant is exceeding acrid. I unfortunately 
tasted both the roots and berries. — r 
_ The leaves toasted and oiled, are applied to indolent tumors to 
bring them to suppuration. 
10. C. feminea, R. o. 
Leaves digitate ; leaflets petiolate, broad-lanceolar, entire. -Style 
none. - Stigma from four to five-lobed. 
A large scandent woody species, a native of woody mountains. 
Flowers during the wet and cold seasons. 
„Stem woody, climbing over trees. Branches flexuose from leaf 
to leaf.— Tendrils simple, opposite to the leaves.— Leaves alternate; 
Petioled, digitate, Leaflets oblong, and lanceolar, a little crenulate, 
