Daviesia major is a species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae and is endemic to the south-west of Western Australia. It is an erect, many-stemmed shrub with scattered, erect, sharply-pointed, cylindrical phyllodes and orange and red flowers.
Daviesia major is a bushy, many-stemmed shrub, that typically grows up to high and about wide, often with spreading, tangled branchlets. Its phyllodes are scattered, sharply pointed, up to long and wide and often resemble the branchlets. The flowers are arranged in racemes of up to three in upper leaf axils, the peduncle and rachis often obscured by bracts up to long, each flower on a pedicel long. The sepals are grey, long and joined at the base, the upper two lobes about long and the lower three about long. The standard petal is egg-shaped with a notch at the tip and turned back by more than 90°, about long, orange with a red base an intensely yellow centre. The wings are about long and dark red, and the keel about long and deep red. Flowering occurs from August to October and the fruit is a sticky, flattened triangular pod long.[1]
This taxon was first formally described in 1864 by George Bentham in Flora Australiensis and given the name Daviesia hakeoides var. major, based on material collected by George Maxwell on "granite hille north from Cape Paisley".[2] [3] In 1995, Michael Crisp raised the variety to species status as Daviesia major.[4] The specific epithet (major) means "larger or taller".[5]
This daviesia grows in heath with scattered eucalypts in sandy soil in near-coastal areas between Busselton and Israelite Bay in the Esperance Plains, Mallee and Swan Coastal Plain biogeographic regions of south-western Western Australia.
Daviesia major is listed as "not threatened" by the Government of Western Australia Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions.