Page:Indian Medicinal Plants (Text Part 1).djvu/429

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
N. 0. AMPELIDÆ.
349


The whole plant covered with decidous down, except on the under-surface of the leaves where it is persistent. Stems flattened, slender for climbing. Leaves membranous, 4-6 in. petiole 1-2 in. ; terminal leaflet elliptic, lateral semi-elliptic, shortly stalked, serrate, at length glabrous above, felted beneath. Flowers dark brown or red, in small compact umbellate cymes, on long woolly peduncles, which bear a forked tendril about an inch from the top. Style very short. Fruit globose, of the size of a cnrrant, black, 3-4-seeded. Seeds ⅓ by 1/6 in., elliptic, with a round depression on the back, puckered round the margins.

Use:— -The vine is often given to horses when it first springs up ; it is said to be very beneficial once a year. The tuberous, starchy, astringent roots, sliced and dried, are sold by the Goncan herbalists, under the name of Chamar-musli (DYMOCK).

304. V. pedata, Vahl. h.f.b.l, i. 661, Roxb. 138.

Sans. : — Godhâpadi (foot of the Iguana, from the shape of the leaf).

Vern. :— Goali-latâ (B.); Tungrûtrikup (Lepcha.); Edakula, mandula, kaunem, pulimâdâ, kâniâpatige, kâdepatige (Tel.) ; Ghorpad-vel (Mar.) ; Mediya-wel (Sinhalese).

Habitat : — Bengal, Sylhet, Assam, Khasia Hills and the Western Peninsula, from the Concan to Ceylon.

A large climber. Stems weak, cylindric, striate, usually covered with short pubescence, mixed with longer, brown, spreading hairs; tendrils long, forked, very slender, young parts tomentose. Leaves large, 3-foliate (Trimen), usually 7-foliate (M.A. Lawson) ; the lateral leaflets usually pedately-compound. Petiole 2-3in,, pubescent and hairy, like the stem, central leaflet long-stalked, lateral leaflets shortly stalked, rarely simple, usually divided into 2-3 or 4 leaflets which are unequal, nearly sessile or shortly stalked, all leaflets acute and often oblique at base, shortly acuminate, acute, coarsely and shallowly