Daviesia emarginata is a species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae and is endemic to the south-west of Western Australia. It is an erect, mostly glabrous shrub with scattered egg-shaped phyllodes with the narrower end towards the base and with a notch at the tip, and yellow and pink flowers.
Daviesia emarginata is an erect, mostly glabrous shrub that typically grows to a height of . Its leaves are reduced to scattered, egg-shaped phyllodes long and wide with a notch at the tip. The flowers are arranged in racemes of three to eight on a peduncle long, the rachis long, each flower on a pedicel long with oblong bracts about long at the base. The sepals are long and joined at the base, the two upper lobes joined for most of their length and the lower three triangular. The standard petal is egg-shaped with a central notch, about long, wide and yellow, the wings about long and yellow with a pink base, and the keel about long and yellow with a pink base. Flowering occurs from January to May and the fruit is a leathery, triangular pod long.[1]
This pea was first formally described in 1845 by Friedrich Anton Wilhelm Miquel who gave it the name Fusanus emarginatus in Johann Georg Christian Lehmann's Plantae Preissianae from specimens collected near Plantagenet in 1840.[2] [3] In 1995, Michael Crisp changed the name to Daviesia emarginata in the journal Phytotaxa.[4] The specific epithet (emarginata) means "notched", referring to the phyllodes.[5]
Daviesia emarginata grows on sandplains in mallee-heathland in near coastal areas between Albany, Ravensthorpe and inland to the Stirling Range in the Avon Wheatbelt, Esperance Plains, Jarrah Forest and Mallee biogeographic regions of south-western Western Australia.
Daviesia emarginata is classified as "not threatened" by the Western Australian Government Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions.