Swamp rose-mallow is a wild hibiscus that prefers wet habitats; the stem can get up to seven feet tall. Flowers arise from leaf axils and are trumpet-shaped, 4-6″ across with five pink or white petals (sometimes with a reddish-purple throat); and, in the center of the flower, a stout cream colored column that bears both whorls of white stamens with yellow anthers and a white style divided into five upcurving parts, each with a pin-head shaped stigma. Behind the corolla are five light green sepals and 12 awl-like 1″ long bracts that curve forwards. This is the more variable of the two local rose mallows; it has white or pink flowers which may or may not have a reddish-purple throat (all are now considered the same species).
Swamp rose-mallow is a wild hibiscus that prefers wet habitats; the stem can get up to seven feet tall. The leaves are alternate, 3-8″ long and 1.5-2x longer than wide, oval, teardrop-shaped, or ((less commonly) with three shallow lobes; toothed around the margins. The petioles are 2-5″ long with a pair of small awl-shaped stipules near their base. This is the more variable of the two local rose mallows; it has white or pink flowers which may or may not have a reddish-purple throat (all are now considered the same species).
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