Malva unguiculata

Malva unguiculata
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Rosids
Order: Malvales
Family: Malvaceae
Genus: Malva
Species:
M. unguiculata
Binomial name
Malva unguiculata
(Desf.) Alef.[1]
Synonyms
Synonym list
    • Althaea unguiculata (Desf.) Kuntze
    • Lavatera unguiculata Desf.
    • Lavatera bryoniifolia Mill.
    • Lavatera sphaciotica Gand.
    • Lavatera tomentosa Dum.Cours.

Malva unguiculata, the bryony-leaved tree-mallow,[2] is a very tall perennial tree-mallow with large pink flowers native to the East Mediterranean.

Description

A very tall (3 m) tree-mallow, notable for the 3-5-triangular-lobed leaves whose end lobes are much to very much larger than the side lobes. The pinkish to violet flowers (petals 20โ€“25 mm) have pale centres and are in groups of 1โ€“2 at the leaf stalks, flower stalks short, reaching only 15 mm at fruiting. Found at cliffs and streambanks, in Turkey 0โ€“130 m.

The stem below is trunk-like and hairless, parts above with starlike hairs (stellate) giving a dusty whitened look.

The 3-part epicalyx is stellate-haired and mostly embraces the calyx like a cup. Fruit segments are rough but not rugose.[3][4][5]

Distribution

Cyprus, East Aegean Is., Greece, Crete, Libya, Palestine, Sicilia, Turkey.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b Plants of the World Online (with map)
  2. ^ iNaturalist: Malva unguiculata
  3. ^ P H Davis. Flora of Turkey and the East Aegean Islands, vol. 2. (as L. bryoniifolia)
  4. ^ George E Post. Flora of Syria, Palestine, and Sinai ed. 2 vol. 1. (p. 238, as L. tomentosa)
  5. ^ Arne Strid. Atlas of the Aegean Flora Part 1. (p. 399, as M. unguiculata)