Westringia blakeana

Westringia blakeana is a flowering plant in the family Lamiaceae and grows in New South Wales and Queensland.

It is a small shrub with mauve to whitish flowers with brown spots and leaves arranged in whorls.

The bracteoles 3.8–5.5 mm (0.15–0.22 in) long, the calyx is green, smooth or with occasional hairs on the outer surface.

[2] Westringia blakeana was first formally described in 1949 by Joseph Robert Bernard Boivin from a specimen collected by Stanley Thatcher Blake in Lamington National Park at an altitude of 2,400 feet, and the description was published in Proceedings of the Royal Society of Queensland.

[3][4] This westringia grows in wet sclerophyll forest and rainforest edges, often near streams or waterfalls in north-eastern New South Wales and south-eastern Queensland.