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 Botanical name:  Leea asiatica    Family: Vitaceae (Grape family) Synonyms: Leea aspera, Leea crispa, Phytolacca asiatica  Asiatic Leea is an erect gergarious shrub with angular stem swollen above the 
nodes and internodes. Petioles and peduncles usually have narrow crisped 
wings. Leaves are pinnately compound - not double-pinnate like 
Bandicoot Berry. Leaflets are 3-5, 
laterals opposite, ovate or ovate-oblong, serrate, tip sharp, base rounded 
or heart-shaped. Flowers, 5-6 mm across, greenish white, are borne in 
short, cymes at the end of branches. Calyx united, cup-like, teeth 5, 
obscure, often glandular-tipped. Petals 5, connate, 2-3 mm long, ovate, 
acute. Stamens 5, united; staminal tube 5-lobes, 2-celled. Ovary inserted 
on the disc; style short; stigma 2-lobed. Leaf extract is mixed with water 
and used for washing hair by Chiru tribe in NE India. Flowering: September.
 Medicinal uses:  Root tuber is used against guineaworms. The root 
with bark of Boswellia serrata is made into paste which is 
prescribed in case of snake-bite by the tribes of Hazaribag district of 
Bihar. 
 • Is this flower misidentified? If yes, |