Pultenaea linophylla, commonly known as halo bush-pea,[1] is a species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae and is endemic to south-eastern continental Australia. It is an erect or prostrate shrub with spreading branches, linear to elliptic or wedge-shaped leaves, and yellow to orange and red to purple flowers.
Pultenaea linophylla is an erect or prostrate shrub that typically grows to a height of and has wiry, spreading branches. The leaves are linear to elliptic or wedge-shaped, long and wide with dark brown, triangular to lance-shaped stipules long at the base. The upper surface of the leaves is darker than the lower. The flowers are arranged in groups of four to six on the ends of short branches and are long, each flower on a pedicel long. There are overlapping narrow egg-shaped to round, three-lobed bracts long at the base of the flowers. The sepals are long and densely hairy with linear to egg-shaped, three-lobed bracteoles long attached to the side of the sepal tube. The standard is yellow to orange and long, the wings are yellow to red and the keel is red to purple. Flowering occurs in most months but mainly from September to October and the fruit is a flattened, hairy pod about long.[2] [3]
Pultenaea linophylla was first formally described in 1797 by Heinrich Schrader and Johann Christoph Wendland in Sertum Hannoveranum from specimens collected near Botany Bay.[4] [5] The specific epithet (linophylla) means "thread-leaved".[6]
Halo push-pea grows in forest and heath from south-eastern Queensland, the coast and tablelands of New South Wales to eastern Victoria.