Chloanthes coccinea is a species of flowering plant in the family Lamiaceae. It is a small, sprawling shrub with scarlet or deep pink flowers. It is endemic to Western Australia.
Chloanthes coccinea is a small, spreading, much branched shrub with stems in cross section more or less circular. The leaves are arranged opposite, narrowly linear, almost needle-shaped due to rolled margins, long and wide, stiff, leathery, distinctly blistered on upper surface, densely woolly on the underside. The bracts are long, pedicel long with branched hairs, calyx 5 lobed, long, moderately crowded with branched hairs and a blistered surface. The scarlet, red or deep pink corolla long, with branched hairs in the throat, four stamens, style long, glandular with soft hairs on the outside, mostly smooth on the inside. The larger anterior lobe has small hairs, the two upper lobes oblong to egg-shaped, rounded at the apex, long, wide at the base. The two lower lobes oblong to egg-shaped, long and wide at the base. The floral tube almost cylindrical near the base. Flowering occurs from July to November and the fruit roughly spherical, long and in diameter and soft hairs on the surface.[1] [2]
Chloanthes coccinea was first formally described in 1845 by Friedrich Gottlieb Bartling and the description was published in Plantae Preissianae.[3] [4] The specific epithet (coccinea) means "scarlet".[5]
This species grows in sand and gravel on sand plains and lateritic locations north of Albany.[1]