This plant is a small tree or shrub, which will grow to approximately 5 ft. high in three or four years in cultivated. It can grow up to three metres in its native land. It is easily recognisable
in situ by means of its large flowers. The branches are alternate, and the bark becomes ashy-coloured on older specimens. The leaves are also
alternate. They are four to five inches in the first year, but then decrease in size to two to three in the following years, always being smaller than their
petioles. The leaves have a
palmately lobed shape, with five to seven, lanceolate, supple lobes, without teeth on their margins, each lobe with a corresponding vein down its centre leading to the base of the leaf. The
stipules are awl-shaped. File:Malva acerifolia var. acerifolia (Jardín Botánico Canario Viera y Clavijo).jpg|Flower of the nominate variety The flowers are axillary and solitary, with somewhat bent
peduncles, these being always much longer than the leaf petioles. The
calyx is
glabrous; the
corolla is some three inches in diameter, and has five
petals (sometimes a petal may be undeveloped) which become broader towards the end. Cavanilles describes the petals as coloured light pink, with dark purple streaks near the base, and the undersides white. They have also been described as a very pallid lilac, almost white, with the base of the petals a more darker colour. The
styles of the
pistils and filaments of the
stamens are bundled together like a column and are coloured purple. The
pollen is globose and depressed in shape. There is one seed per
locule, these are arranged in a wheel, with the number of seeds corresponding to the number of the
stigmas, twelve to fifteen. ==Distribution==