32 
Srrc. Cuar. Herbaceous, leaves trifoliolate: leaflets hairy on 
both sides, ovate-acuminated, unequal at the base, sharply toothed, 
terminal one sometimes 3-lobed or divided into 3 leaflets: siliqua 
erect: flowers white. 
Neilgherries, in moist marshy places. 
(2) C. nirsura. (Linn) 
Ident. Dec. prod. I. p. 152.—W. & A. prod. I. p. 20. 
Engrav. Curt. Lond. II. t. 37,—Bat. VII. t. 492. 
-Sprc. Cuar. Herbaceous, Jeaves pinnated, upper leaves of the 
stem oblong, nearly sessile: stamens 4-6, equal in length to the 
petals: petalsas long as, occasionally longer than the calyx: stigma 
nearly sessile : flowers yellow. 
Neilgherries. Found all over the world, and varying ae¢cording 
to soil, moisture, and exposure. A variety is foundon hills in 
Belgaum. Flowering in July. 
ORDER X. CAPPARIDACEZ. 
Herbaceous plants, shrubs, or even trees, sometimes spines- 
cent: leaves alternate, undivided, or palmate: flowers solitary 
or racemose: sepals 4: petals 4, cruciate, usually clawed, and 
unequal: stamens hypogynous, almost perigynous, definite, or in- 
definite, but generally some high multiple of four: receptacles 
often glandular: ovary stalked or sessile, 1-celled: style 1, or 
wanting: anthers introrse, opening lengthwise: fruit pod-shap- 
ed, or baccate, dehiscent or indehiscent, 1-celled, rarely 1-seeded, 
usually with two many-seeded placentee: seeds generally kidney- 
‘shaped, exalbuminous, with a tumid testa: embryo curved 
inwards: cotyledons foliaceous, flattish. 
GENUS I. GYNANDROPSIS. 
Monadelphia Miexandria. Sex: Syst: 
Deriv. From Gyne, female, Aner Andros, male, and Opsis, re- 
semblance, the stamens appearing as if inserted on the ovary. 
Grn. Cuar. Sepals 4, spreading: petals 4: torus elangated, 
linear: filaments united with the torus at their extremities, free 
above: siliqua stalked, 
