Annual or perennial herbs or suffrutices. Leaves (in ours), serrate, crenate-serrate or lobed. Flowers orange, yellow or cream, usually opening in the morning. Epicalyx 0. Fruit of 5 to 12 mericarps, dehiscent at the apex, base or indehiscent, usually acute, beaked or awned, each containing one seed. Note that Malvastrum coromandelianum looks like a species of Sida and grows in similar habitats, but may be easily separated by its 3 linear epicalyx bracts. Similarly, Hibiscus sidiformis, as the name suggests, somewhat resembles a Sida and, indeed, lacks an epicalyx. However, it would be readily separated by the fruit. Derivation of name: (oddly) from a Greek name for a water-lily. Worldwide: c. 200 species in tropical and warm zones, but especially America Mozambique: 11 taxa. |
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| Species | FZ divisions | Content |
| acuta Burm.f. | Z,MS,GI,M | Description, Image |
| alba L. | T,MS,M | Description, Image |
| cordifolia L. subsp. maculata (Cav.) Marais | N,Z,MS,GI,M | Description, Image |
| dregei Burtt Davy | GI,M | |
| hoepfneri Gürke | GI | Description, Image |
| ovata Forssk. | T,MS,GI,M | Description, Image |
| pseudocordifolia Hochr. | N,MS | |
| rhombifolia L. | MS,GI,M | |
| serratifolia Wilczek & Steyaert | MS | |
| urens L. | N | Description |
| veronicifolia Lam. | N |