Greater Musk-mallow

Malva alcea

''Malva alcea'' is a plant in the mallow family native to southwestern, central and eastern Europe and southwestern Asia, from Spain north to southern Sweden and east to Russia and Turkey.
Greater Musk-mallow - Malva alcea Seen in St Pietersberg, Maastricht, Holland. Aug 2014. Geotagged,Greater Musk-mallow,Malva alcea,Netherlands,Summer

Appearance

It is a herbaceous perennial plant growing to 50–125 cm tall, with stems covered in stellate hairs, meaning they branch at the free end into several strands. The leaves are 2-8 cm long and 2-8 cm broad, palmately lobed with five to seven blunt lobes; basal leaves on the lower stem are very shallowly lobed, those higher on the stems are deeply divided, with digitate finger-like lobes. The flowers appear singly near the apex of corymbose racemes growing from the leaf axils in summer to early fall. They are 3.5–6 cm diameter, with five sepals and five bright pink petals, and have no scent. The bracteoles that make up the epicalyx are ovate and wide at the base where they are fused with the calyx. The fruit is a hairless disc-shaped schizocarp 4–8 mm diameter, containing several seeds, the seeds individually enclosed in a glabrous or hairy mericarp. It has a chromosome count of 2n=84.
Hollyhock Mallow In Dutch: vijfdelig kaasjeskruid Geotagged,Malva alcea,The Netherlands,malva alcea

Habitat

It is most common in drier soils in thickets, along paths and in waste places. Natural hybrids with the closely related ''Malva moschata'' are occasionally found. In central Europe it grows at altitudes of up to 2,000 m.
Malva alcea (greater musk mallow) Naturalized in a damp area along the edge of a driveway. Flowers without a strong odor. Geotagged,Greater Musk-mallow,Malva alcea,Malvaceae,Summer,United States,angiosperm,pink flower,plant

Uses

It has been widely grown outside of its native range as an ornamental plant. Several cultivars exist such as 'Fastigata', an upright form, and 'Alba', a white flowered form. In some areas, such as the northeastern United States, the plant has escaped from cultivation and become naturalised. It is very similar to, and often confused with ''Malva moschata''.

References:

Some text fragments are auto parsed from Wikipedia.

Status: Unknown
EX EW CR EN VU NT LC
Taxonomy
KingdomPlantae
DivisionAngiosperms
ClassEudicots
OrderMalvales
FamilyMalvaceae
GenusMalva
Species