About Prostanthera densa A.A.Ham.
Prostanthera densa, also commonly called villous mint-bush, is an erect, aromatic, often compact shrub. It typically grows to a height between 0.5 and 2 metres (1 ft 8 in โ 6 ft 7 in) and has hairy branches. Its leaves are egg-shaped to triangular, usually hairy, 10โ15 mm (0.39โ0.59 in) long, 7โ12 mm (0.28โ0.47 in) wide, and grow from a petiole 1โ1.5 mm (0.039โ0.059 in) long. Flowers are arranged singly in two to ten of the uppermost leaf axils, with bracteoles about 5 mm (0.20 in) long at the base of each flower. The sepals are hairy, sometimes tinged with purple, and 6.5โ8 mm (0.26โ0.31 in) long. They form a tube about 4 mm (0.16 in) wide with two lobes, where the upper lobe is 3โ3.5 mm (0.12โ0.14 in) long. The petals are pale mauve to mauve with orange and white markings, 12โ15 mm (0.47โ0.59 in) long, forming a tube 6โ8 mm (0.24โ0.31 in) long. The lower central petal lobe is 6.5โ10 mm (0.26โ0.39 in) long, the lower side lobes are 2.5โ5 mm (0.098โ0.197 in) long, and the upper lobes are 3โ4.5 mm (0.12โ0.18 in) long, fused with a central notch 1.5โ2 mm (0.059โ0.079 in) long. A small number of flowers can appear throughout the year, with flowering peaking in spring. This species grows in forest and shrubland on the coast and nearby ranges between Nelson Bay and the Beecroft Peninsula.