Base de datos de plantas del FNPS

Abutilon hulseanum

mauve
  • Photo by: Shirley Denton, Suncoast Chapter FNPS
  • Photo by: Shirley Denton, Suncoast Chapter FNPS
  • Photo by: Shirley Denton, Suncoast Chapter FNPS
  • Photo by: Shirley Denton, Suncoast Chapter FNPS
  • Photo by: Shirley Denton, Suncoast Chapter FNPS

Nomenclatura

Nombre común:

mauve

Sinónimo(s):

Sida huselana

Especie del género:

Abutilon hulseanum

Familia:

Malvaceae

Especificaciones de la planta

Forma:

shrub

Tamaño:

Up to about 7ft tall, rangy unless cut back periofically.  Somewhat shrubby but not really woody.

Esperanza de vida:

Long-lived perennial

Color de la flor:

orangy pink

Color de la fruta:

brown

Fenología:

Blooms late winter, early spring.

Destacado por:

Paisajismo

Usos recomendados:

Consideraciones:

Noted for being weedy.

Disponibilidad:

Propagación:

Easily grown from seed.  Can be bought from several native nurseries.  Will spread.

Luz:

Tolerancia a la humedad:

Siempre inundado---------------------------------Extremadamente seco

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Not wet but not extremely dry -a- Somewhat long very dry periods

Tolerancia a inundaciones por agua salada:

Unknown

Tolerancia a la niebla salina/suelo salado:

Some tolerance to salty wind but not direct salt spray

Suelo u otro sustrato:

pH del suelo:

slightly acidic to calcareous

Apto para cultivo en:

Las zonas del USDA se basan en la temperatura mínima extrema invernal anual promedio.

¿No conoces tu zona? Haz clic aquí para buscar por código postal.

Acreditado en:

Distribution
Vouchered
Not vouchered
Selected
Click a county The county name will appear here.
No county distribution is available for this plant yet.
Starting…
Map coded by Melissa Fernandez-de Cespedes (Paynes Prairie Chapter)

Ecología

Fauna:

Pollinators, Butterflies

Hábitats nativos:

Disturbed. Old orange groves, pasture, roadsides. May occur naturally along the west FL coast including shell mounds and dunes . All records for inland areas are from disturbed sites, predominantly old orange groves and pastures.

Área de distribución natural en Florida:

Comentarios:

Etnobotánica:

No known uses.  

Comentarios generales:

According to Kew Gardens, it is from Central America and probably Cuba and Florida.   After going through the photos and labels for specimens in the SIEnet database, the only occurrences in Florida that were convincingly in natural systems (as opposed to highly disturbed areas) were on shell mounds, dunes, and similar coastal areas.  Hence, the range map provided highlights the counties along the west coast that have these.



Noted as invasive  and weedy on many herbarium specimen labels.  Where not native, we should think of it as invasive.  

FNPS Plant Print

Citas:

Gann, G.D., C.J. Abbott, C.G. Stocking, K.N. Hines, and collaborators. (2001+). Mauve Mallow. Natives For Your Neighborhood. ( (https://www.regionalconservation.org/beta/nfyn/plantdetail.asp?tx=Abuthuls ). Accessed 2025. The Institute for Regional Conservation. Delray Beach, Florida.


KEW Royal Botanic Gardens. Plants of the World On Line. ( https://powo.science.kew.org/taxon/urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:60467477-2 ). Accessed 2025.)


Westerveldt, Anita. Anita's Blog - Cause and Effect. ( https://rgvctmn.org/blog/anitas-blog-cause-and-effect/ ). Accessed 2025. Rio Grande Chapter Master Naturalists.


Wunderlin, R. P., B. F. Hansen, A. R. Franck, and F. B. Essig. (1999+). Atlas of Florida Plants. ( https://florida.plantatlas.usf.edu/ ). [S. M. Landry and K. N. Campbell (application development), USF Water Institute.] Institute for Systematic Botany, University of South Florida, Tampa.

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