Swainsona luteola
F.Muell.Prostrate, procumbent or semi-erect perennial herb, to 50 cm tall; stems sparsely or densely pubescent with straight or irregular, loosely appressed basifixed hairs. Leaves mostly 3–10 cm long; leaflets 3–17, narrow-elliptic to obovate, 5–20 mm long, 3–10 mm wide, apices obtuse to acute, glabrous above, pubescent below; stipules oblique, 2–5 mm long. Racemes mostly 5–15-flowered; flowers 6–8 mm long; calyx pubescent, teeth equal to or longer than tube; petals purple or sometimes yellow; standard 6–9 mm long, 5–8 mm wide, suborbicular, clawed; keel 5–8.5 mm long, obtuse, apex lipped and somewhat twisted; style tip incurled, beard minute or absent. Pod ellipsoid to narrow-obloid, mostly 20–35 mm long, 3–8 mm wide, inflated, glabrous or sparsely pubescent, stipe to c. 2 mm long; seeds to c. 20, cordate to reniform, c. 2 mm long, brown. Flowers Aug.–Nov.
Also Qld, NSW. Known in Victoria by a single 1966 colection from riverine woodland west of Mildura. Now presumed extinct in the State.
The name S. luteola was misapplied to some early records of S. pyrophila. Consequently, some references may suggest a wider Victorian distribution for S. luteola than is warranted.
Jeanes, J.A. (1996). Fabaceae. In: Walsh, N.G.; Entwisle, T.J., Flora of Victoria Vol. 3, Dicotyledons Winteraceae to Myrtaceae, pp. 663–829. Inkata Press, Melbourne.