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How to Manage Pests

Identification: Weed Photo Gallery

Little mallow (cheeseweed)

Scientific name: Malva parviflora (Family Malvaceae)

Life stages of Little mallow (cheeseweed) Fruit Seedling Rootstock Flowers

Click on image to enlarge

DESCRIPTION:
Little mallow (cheeseweed) is a winter annual. Seed leaves are distinctly heart shaped and tinged red. True leaves are roundish with wavy, shallow-toothed margins and a red spot at the leaf base. The mature plant forms dense bushes that trail along the ground or grow upright, 1 to 4 feet (30 - 120 cm) tall. It has a tough, woody stem. Its flowers are white with a bluish or pinkish tinge and are held in clusters in the leaf axils. The fruit resembles a miniature wheel of cheese.

See UC IPM's Mallows Pest Note for more information.

Broadleaf ID illustration.


Statewide IPM Program, Agriculture and Natural Resources, University of California
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For noncommercial purposes only, any Web site may link directly to this page. FOR ALL OTHER USES or more information, read Legal Notices. Unfortunately, we cannot provide individual solutions to specific pest problems. See How to manage pests, or in the U.S., contact your local Cooperative Extension office for assistance. /PMG/WEEDS/little_mallow.html revised: March 11, 2008. Contact webmaster.