Goodenia glabrata, commonly known as pee the bed, is a species of flowering plant in the family Goodeniaceae and is native to mainland Australia. It is a mostly glabrous annual herb with ascending flowering stems, oblong to lance-shaped leaves with toothed edges, and yellow flowers.
Goodenia glabrata is a mostly glabrous annual herb with erect stems up to long. Its leaves are oblong to lance-shaped with the narrower end towards the base, long and up to wide with toothed to lyre-shaped edges. The flowers are borne on an ascending flowering stem up to long with bracteoles up to long and joined at the base. The lower sepal is long, and the petals are yellow, long and hairy, with wings about wide almost to the base of the lower sepal. Flowering mainly occurs from July to February and the fruit is a more or less spherical capsule containing seeds in diameter with wings about wide.
This species was first formally described in 1967 by Roger Charles Carolin who gave it the name Velleia glabrata in the Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales. In 2020, Kelly Anne Shepherd and others transferred it to the genus Goodenia as G. glabrata in Australian Systematic Botany.[1] [2]
Goodenia glabrata grows in drier communities and occurs in all mainland states of Australia except Victoria. It is widespread in mainly inland areas of Western Australia, in the south of the Northern Territory, in the north-west of South Australia in Queensland, and in western New South Wales between Bourke and Brewarrina.