Gompholobium pungens is a species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae and is endemic to the south-west of Western Australia. It is an erect, openly-branched shrub with spiny stems, pinnate leaves and mostly yellow, pea-like flowers with pink or purple markings.
Gompholobium pungens is an erect, openly-branched shrub that typically grows to high and up to wide and has spiny stems. Its leaves are long and pinnate with eight to seventeen cylindrical leaflets. Each flower is borne on a hairy pedicel long with hairy bracteoles long. The sepals are about long, the standard petal is yellow to orange with pink or purple markings and about long, the wings about long, and the keel about long. Flowering occurs from August to September and the fruit is a pod about long.
Gompholobium pungens was first formally described in 2008 by Jennifer Anne Chappill in Australian Systematic Botany from specimens collected near Warradarge in 1999.[1] The specific epithet (pungens) means "ending in a sharp, hard point".[2]
This pea grows in lower valley slopes and on small rises in the Geraldton Sandplains, Jarrah Forest and Swan Coastal Plain biogeographic regions of south-western Western Australia.
Gompholobium pungens is classified as "not threatened" by the Western Australian Government Department of Parks and Wildlife.