Malvastrum: Difference between revisions
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From Malva and its allies it differs in having short or capitate stigmas on the style-branches rather than longitudinal stigmas, and a single whorl of carpels. From Malvaviscus it differs in having a dry rather than a baccate fr., and in other characters. Herbs and undershrubs of differing habit, sometimes low and diffuse and sometimes tall : lvs. various, entire, cordate or lobed : fls. scarlet, orange or yellow, short- peduncled or nearly sessile, axillary or in terminal spikes; calyx- like involucel wanting or of 2 or 3 bracts; calyx 5-cleft; petals emarginate or entire; styles 5 or more: carpels few to many, 1-ovuled, nearly or quite in- dehiscent and falling away from the axis at maturity.—Some 70-80 or more species, in Amer. and S. Afr. The garden species are perennials of easy cult., blooming in the hot weather. | From Malva and its allies it differs in having short or capitate stigmas on the style-branches rather than longitudinal stigmas, and a single whorl of carpels. From Malvaviscus it differs in having a dry rather than a baccate fr., and in other characters. Herbs and undershrubs of differing habit, sometimes low and diffuse and sometimes tall : lvs. various, entire, cordate or lobed : fls. scarlet, orange or yellow, short- peduncled or nearly sessile, axillary or in terminal spikes; calyx- like involucel wanting or of 2 or 3 bracts; calyx 5-cleft; petals emarginate or entire; styles 5 or more: carpels few to many, 1-ovuled, nearly or quite in- dehiscent and falling away from the axis at maturity.—Some 70-80 or more species, in Amer. and S. Afr. The garden species are perennials of easy cult., blooming in the hot weather. | ||
M. Gilliesii. Baker. More or less procumbent: lvs. hairy, palmately divided: fls. 1 in. or more across, bright red. S. Amer.— M. splendidum, once listed, is probably M. Thurberi var. laxiflorum, Gray (M. splendidum, Kell.), in S. Utah to S. Calif. Shrub, becoming 12 ft. or more, gray tomentose: lvs. roundish and mostly subcordate, 3-cleft or obscurely 3-5-lobed: fls. rosy pink, fragrant, rather loosely paniculate. | |||
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Latest revision as of 11:34, 29 December 2009
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Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture |
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Malvastrum (name made from Malva). Malvaceae. False Mallow. Mallow-like herbs grown with perennials. From Malva and its allies it differs in having short or capitate stigmas on the style-branches rather than longitudinal stigmas, and a single whorl of carpels. From Malvaviscus it differs in having a dry rather than a baccate fr., and in other characters. Herbs and undershrubs of differing habit, sometimes low and diffuse and sometimes tall : lvs. various, entire, cordate or lobed : fls. scarlet, orange or yellow, short- peduncled or nearly sessile, axillary or in terminal spikes; calyx- like involucel wanting or of 2 or 3 bracts; calyx 5-cleft; petals emarginate or entire; styles 5 or more: carpels few to many, 1-ovuled, nearly or quite in- dehiscent and falling away from the axis at maturity.—Some 70-80 or more species, in Amer. and S. Afr. The garden species are perennials of easy cult., blooming in the hot weather. M. Gilliesii. Baker. More or less procumbent: lvs. hairy, palmately divided: fls. 1 in. or more across, bright red. S. Amer.— M. splendidum, once listed, is probably M. Thurberi var. laxiflorum, Gray (M. splendidum, Kell.), in S. Utah to S. Calif. Shrub, becoming 12 ft. or more, gray tomentose: lvs. roundish and mostly subcordate, 3-cleft or obscurely 3-5-lobed: fls. rosy pink, fragrant, rather loosely paniculate.
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Cultivation
Propagation
Pests and diseases
Varieties
Gallery
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References
- Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture, by L. H. Bailey, MacMillan Co., 1963
External links
- w:Malvastrum. Some of the material on this page may be from Wikipedia, under the Creative Commons license.
- Malvastrum QR Code (Size 50, 100, 200, 500)