Bossiaea foliosa, commonly known as leafy bossiaea,[1] is a species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae and is endemic to south-eastern Australia. It is an erect shrub with small, broadly egg-shaped to round leaves, and bright yellow flowers.
Bossiaea foliosa is an erect shrub that typically grows to a height of up to about and has hairy branches. The leaves are arranged alternately along the stems, broadly egg-shaped to more or less round, long and wide with more or less persistent triangular stipules long at the base. The flowers are long and arranged singly in leaf axils, each flower on a pedicel up to long with a few crowded bracts about long. The sepals are long with narrow elliptic bracteoles long at the base of the sepal tube. The petals are uniformly bright yellow, the petals more or less equal in length. Flowering occurs from October to December and the fruit is a more or less round pod long.[2] [3] [4]
Bossiaea foliosa was first formally described in 1825 by Allan Cunningham who found it growing in "brushy forest-land near Bathurst" and published the description in the chapter "On the Botany of the Blue Mountains" of Barron Field's book, Geographical Memoirs on New South Wales.[5] [6] The specific epithet (foliosa) means "leafy".[7]
Leafy bossiaea grows in open forest and woodland, sometimes in Sphagnum bogs, at high altitudes south from near Orange in New South Wales through the Australian Capital Territory to the ranges in the east and north-east of Victoria.
foliosa