mallow ninebark Rosaceae Physocarpus malvaceus (Greene) Kuntze Listen to the Latin   symbol: PHMA5
Other Fact Sheets
Leaf: Alternate, simple, deciduous, maple-like, palmately 3 lobed (occasionally 5); almost circular in outline, 1 1/2 to 3 inches in diameter, blunt serrated margin; dark green above, paler and fuzzy below.
Flower: Monoecious; perfect, small (1/2 inch) white to faint pink flowers borne in small, dense, upright, hemispherical clusters, appearing in late spring to early summer.

Fruit: Small (1/4 inch long) pointed follicles borne in dense, upright hemispherical clusters, initially they are red and later turning a bright reddish brown.

Twig: Slender and red-brown; young twigs have tight bark but on older twigs the bark splits and exfoliates in long strips; buds with many obvious loose scales, leaf scars raised with lines running downward angling the twigs.

Bark: Thin and yellow-, orange-, or red-brown; shredded and exfoliating in long strips, especially on older stems, fairly attractive.

Form: A medium sized, vase-shaped shrub up to 5 feet.
 
No range map exists for this species. See a map of the states in which Physocarpus malvaceus can be found (opens a new window). USDAFS Additional Silvics - USDA Plants Database
Physocarpus malvaceus is native to North America.

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