It is a large
shrub or small
tree growing to or rarely to tall, with a dense crown. The
leaves are long and broad, with two or three shallow, forward-pointing lobes on each side of the leaf. The
hermaphrodite flowers are produced in
corymbs of 6 to 12, each flower with five white or pale pink petals and two or sometimes three styles. They are pollinated by
insects. The
fruit is a dark red
pome diameter, slightly broader than long, containing two or three
nutlets. It flowers in May to June (UK) in rather lax clusters. The flowers are usually white, but can be pink. Flowers are up to 2.4 cm in diameter, with 2–3 styles and stigmas and more than 20 stamens. They have 5 triangular sepals, which are obtuse. The petals can be slightly velvety on the inside. Its fruit
persists for an average of 64.4 days, and bears an average of 2.8 seeds per fruit. Fruits average 77.4% water, and their
dry weight includes 11.1%
carbohydrates and 1.4%
lipids. The Midland hawthorn is distinguished from the closely related common hawthorn,
C. monogyna, in the leaves being only shallowly lobed, with forward-pointing lobes, without hair tufts in the vein axils, and in the flowers having more than one style. Each style produces a seed, so its fruits also have more than one seed and these make them slightly oval, in contrast with the single-seeded and therefore round fruits of common hawthorn. The two species
hybridise, giving rise to
C. × media. ==Taxonomy==