ee E 
View. ; AMPELIDE. 197 
(perhaps copied from Petiver, mus. n. 696.) but not of the rest of the plant, 
belongs to it. C. vitiginea, Willd. en. hort. Ber., is, as we have already 
mentioned, a species allied to V. adnata, and is, we suspect, from its standing 
the elimate of the south of France (whence the specimen before us was ob- 
tained), not a native of India, but of Persia, as is stated by Sprengel. 
+ + Leaves digitate ; leaflets 3-5. 
418. (10) V. Rheedei (W. & A.:) glabrous: stipules oval: leaves trifolio- 
late, upper ones often only deeply 3-cleft ; leaflets distantly bristle-toothed, 
oblong-lanceolate, sharply acuminated in the lower part of the stem petiolate, 
in the upper part sessile, but tapering much at the base ; lateral ones unequal 
sided: umbels compound, about equal to the petiole : petals distinct: style 
slender, conspicuous: fruit globose, 1-seeded.— Wight! cat. n. 431.—V. he- 
terophylla, Wall. ! L. n. 6036.—Cissus trilobata, Lam. ; DC. prod. 1. p. 629. 
—C. heterophylla. Herb. Madr.! (not Poir.).—Rheed. Mal. 7. t. 45. (good.) 
419. (11) V. setosa (Wall. :) clothed with scattered glandular bristly hairs, 
but otherwise glabrous: stem herbaceous: stipules ovate: leaves succulent, 
trifoliolate, without a common petiole ; leaflets stalked, roundish, ovate, or 
obovate, obtuse, with sharp numerous bue e bristly serratures: eymes pe- 
duncled, with divaricating branches: pe distinct : elevated. part of the 
torus 4-lobed, lobes large and gland-like : style conspicuous : berries (red) 
ovoid, hairy, 1-seeded.—Wall.! L. n. 6009 ; Wight ! cat. n. 422.—Cissus seto- 
Sus, Roxb. ! fl. Ind. 1. p. 410; (ed. Wall.) 1. p. 428; in E. I. C. mus. tab. 542 ; 
DC. prod. 1. p. 630 ; Spr. syst. 1. p. 448. 
420. (12) V. carnosa (Wall.:) young parts clothed with a short dense pu- 
scence, older glabrous: stem compressed, striated: stipules oblong: leaves 
trifoliolate on longish petioles ; leaflets stalked, roundish or ovate or obovate, 
acute or obtuse, crenate-serrated : cymes peduncled, compound : petals dis- 
tinct: style conspicuous: berries black, 2-4-seeded.—Cissus carnosa, Roxb. 
A. Ind. 1. p. 409; (ed. Wall.) 1. p. 427.—z; leaflets ovate, acute or acumi- 
nated.—C. carnosa, Wall.! L. n. 6018.—V. crenata, Wall.! L. n. 6021, e, f. 
—C. acida, Roxb. in E. I. C. mus. tab. 541.—C. cinerea, Lam.; DC. prod. 
1. p. 631; Spr. syst. 1. p. 448.—Rheed. Mal. 7. t.9; Rumph. Amb. 5. t. 166. 
J. 2.—58; leaflets ovate, bluntish— Wight! cat. n. 424, 426.—V. crenata, 
- "erm n. 6021, a, by g.— V. auriculata, Wall. ! L. n. he inc car- 
osa, - 3 Vahl, symb. 3. p. 19; DC. prod. 1. p. 630 ; Spr. syst. 1. p. 449.— 
7 ; leaflets roundish. Wight! cat. n. T crenata, Wall.! L. n. 6021. c. 
issus crenata, Vahl! symb. 3. p. 19; DC. prod. 1. p. 631; Spr. syst. b 
P. 449.—3 ; leaflets obovate, obtuse.— Wight ! cat. n. 425.—V. crenata, Wall.! 
L. n. 6021. d.—Cissus obtusifolia, Lam. ve | 
mn erhaps the above ought not even to be reckoned as varieties, as they some- 
times pass from one to the other on the same individual. The specimen of 
‘sus acida in the Linnean herbarium appears scarcely distinct, but the true 
Plant is from the West Indies. Pluk. t. 152. f. 2 (Bryonioides trifoliatum in- 
seems intermediate between our y and 3. | o 
421. (13) V. Rowburghii (W. & A.:) glabrous: stems woody ; branches 
flexuose, terete, with smooth shining : leaves petioled, late, oc- 
casionally with 4 (or 5?) leaflets and digitate; leaflets stalked, membrana- 
veous, slightly repand ; lateral ones ovate or oblong-lanceolate, attenuated at 
both extremities ; cymes peduncled, much shorter than the petiole, axillary, 
dichotomous : petals distinct: elevated part of the torus turbinate, 4-lobed : 
gle conspicuous: fruit globose, 2-4-seeded.—Wight ! eat. n. 427 — Cissus 
543: Dr Roxb. fl. Ind. 1. p. 410 ; (ed. Wail.) 1. p. 429; in E. I. C. mus. tab. 
3 DC. prod. 1. p. 630 ; Spr. syst. 1. p. 450. ; 
The TER xad pra aii tiis ta but this is the only Peninsu- 
lar species which at all accords with C. feminea, Roxb., and we have accord- 
