Kunzea rostrata is a species of flowering plant in the myrtle family, Myrtaceae and is endemic to an area along the south west coast of Western Australia. It is a shrub with small, mostly elliptic leaves and with groups of between mostly eleven and fifteen rose pink flowers mainly on the ends of branches that continue to grow after flowering.
Kunzea rostrata is a shrub with many branches and that typically grows to a height of . It has elliptic to egg-shaped leaves long and about wide on a petiole long. It has more or less spherical groups of flowers on the ends of branches that continue to grow after flowering. There are usually between eleven and fifteen rose pink flowers in the groups. There are egg-shaped bracts long and about wide at the base of the flowers and well as pairs of similar bracteoles. The floral cup is long at flowering times. The sepals are triangular to lance-shaped, and glabrous and the petals are egg-shaped and about long. There are between 25 and 38 stamens long in several whorls. Flowering occurs in October and November and the fruit is an urn-shaped capsule.[1]
Kunzea rostrata was first formally described in 1996 by Hellmut R. Toelken and the description was published in Journal of the Adelaide Botanic Garden.[2] The specific epithet (rostrata) is a word Latin meaning "beaked",[3] referring to the point on the tip of the sepals.
This kunzea is only known from the area between Cape Naturaliste peninsula and Cowaramup Bay near Gracetown, often found growing in grey sands or peaty soils along the coast.