The youngest Cyphia digitata leaves in picture are yellow-green with occasional brown on some margins and possibly shinier than their older mates. The lateral lobes point forward initially, the young petiole outsized like the head of a baby compared to the rest of it.
The pair of side-arm lobes ascending from the lower part of the central lobe on a mature leaf are not always aligned opposite each other, as in one case in the photo.
The big lateral lobes emerging from the leaf-base have only one side-lobe each. It points to the back, veering away like the small toe on the foot of an ostrich.
This plant is sometimes commonly called the finger baroe (Vlok and Schutte-Vlok, 2015; iNaturalist).