Prostanthera cryptandroides
Prostanthera cryptandroides is a species of flowering plant in the family Lamiaceae and is endemic to eastern Australia. It is a low, spreading shrub with narrow egg-shaped leaves and lilac to mauve flowers arranged singly in leaf axils.
Description
Prostanthera cryptandroides is a low, spreading, strongly aromatic shrub, the branches with spreading hairs as well as glandular hairs. The leaves are pale green, narrow egg-shaped, long, wide and sessile or on a petiole up to long. The flowers are tube-shaped and arranged in upper leaf axils near the ends of branchlets. There are bracteoles long at the base of the flower, but that fall off as the flower develops. The sepals are long and form a tube long with two lobes, the upper long. The petals are lilac to mauve and long. Flowering occurs from September to April.Taxonomy
Prostanthera cryptandroides was first formally described in 1834 by George Bentham from an unpublished description by Allan Cunningham and the description was published in Bentham's book Labiatarum Genera et Species from specimens collected by Cunningham near the Hunter River.In 1999, Barry Conn described two subspecies of P. cryptandroides in the journal Telopea and the names are accepted by the Australian Plant Census:Prostanthera cryptandroides A.Cunn. ex Benth. subsp. cryptandroides has branches and sepals without stalked glandular hairs;Prostanthera cryptandroides subsp. euphrasioides B.J.Conn has stalked glandular hairs on the branches and sepals.