Species of flowering plant in the Mallow family Malvaceae
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 20โ25 mm) have pale centres and are in groups of 1โ2 at the leaf stalks, flower stalks short, reaching only 15 mm at fruiting. Found at cliffs and streambanks, in Turkey 0โ130 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