Pultenaea grayi, commonly known as Murrumbidgee bossiaea,[1] is a species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae and is endemic to the Australian Capital Territory. It is an erect shrub with flattened, winged, glabrous cladodes, leaves reduced to small scales, and pea-like, yellow and red flowers.
Bossiaea grayi is an erect, rhizome-forming shrub that typically grows to a height of up to . The flowers are borne on flattened, winged, more or less erect cladodes up to wide. The leaves are reduced to reddish-brown scales, long and pressed against the cladode. The flowers are borne singly at nodes on the cladode, each on a pedicel long with overlapping, dark brown bracts up to long, at the base. The five sepals are long and joined at the base forming a tube with more or less equal lobes long. There are also bracteoles but that fall off before the flower opens. The standard petal is deep yellow with a red base and long, the wings yellow with a red base and about long and the keel is dark red and long. Flowering occurs in September and October and the fruit is an oblong pod long.[2] [3] [4]
Bossiaea grayi was first formally described in 2009 by Keith Leonard McDougall in the journal Telopea from specimens collected near the Murrumbidgee River, downstream from the Kambah Pool in 1980.[5] The specific epithet (grayi) honours the retired taxonomist Max Gray.
Murrumbidgee bossiaea grows in woodland on the banks of the Murrumbidgee River and its tributaries in the Australian Capital Territory.
Bossiaea grayi is listed as "endangered" under the Australian Capital Territory Government Nature Conservation Act 2014.