Goodenia panduriformis, commonly known as Pindan poison, is a species of flowering plant in the family Goodeniaceae and is endemic to north-western Australia. It is a glaucous herb with erect flower stems, glabrous, toothed, egg-shaped leaves with the narrower end towards the base, bracteoles joined to form a large disc, and deep- or brownish-yellow flowers.
Goodenia panduriformis is a glaucous herb with egg-shaped leaves, the narower end towards the base, up to long and wide with toothed edges. The flowers are borne on a flowering stem up to tall with bracteoles joined to form a funnel-like disc up to wide, often split down one side. The sepals are more or less free from each other, the lower sepal broadly elliptic and long. The petals are long, covered with soft hairs on the outside and bearded inside and deep- or brownish-yellow, the wings up to wide. Flowering mainly occurs from April to September and the capsule is oval, containing a round seed in diameter with a wings about wide.[1] [2]
This species was first formally described in 1868 by George Bentham in his Flora Australiensis, who gave it the name Velleia panduriformis from an unpublished description byAllan Cunningham.[3] [4] In 2020, Kelly Anne Shepherd transferred the species to Goodenia as G. panduriformis in the journal PhytoKeys.[5] The specific epithet panduriformis means lute- or fiddle-shaped.[6]
Pindan poison occurs in the Central Kimberley, Dampierland, Great Sandy Desert, Northern Kimberley and Victoria Bonaparte bioregions of northern Western Australia and in the east of the Northern Territory, where it grows in red sand in open shrubland and low woodland.[1] [7]