724 MONOECIA SYNGENESIA, Bryonia. 
Note. The form of the fruit must be attended to, to dis- 
tinguish these three last described species. 
The fruit of this sort is used in food by the natives and 
much esteemed, yet they never take the trouble to cultivate 
the plant. 
9, C. integrifolia. Roxb. 
Leaves sub-rotund, almost destitute of angles, very rugose, 
posterior lobes rounded, both male and female flowers soli- 
tary. Fruit globular, smooth. 
A native of Bengal, ae and xeinmanes its seeds dur- 
ing the rains, 
Stems annual, creeping to a great extent, and exceedingly 
ramous, angular and hairy. Leaves sub-rotund, with scarce- 
ly any angles, or rather marginal inequalities, deeply sinuated 
behind, with the lobes rounded, very rugose, scabrous above 
and hairy underneath, from three to six inches each way. 
MALE FLowekrs solitary, long-peduncled, large, pure white, | 
pubescent, FEMALE FLOWERS also solitary, but shorter pe- 
duncled, pure white and pubescent. /ruit globular, of the 
size of a nutmeg, smooth, when ripe of an orange colour. 
Sf 
BRYONIA. Schreb. gen. N. 1480. 
Male calyx five-toothed. Corol five-parted. Filaments 
three. Female calyx and corol as in the male. Berry few 
or neat 
Be ‘SR peajelhn. Willd. iv. 619. 
Leaves five-angled, toothed, scabrous, the male flowers pe- 
tioled, and the female ones sessile. Berries globular, many- 
seeded.. Seeds smooth, 
Hind, Agumuki, 
Teling. Puten budinga, 
Cucumis Madraspatensis fructominimo, Pluck. 123.4. 70. 
fi. 
