Gompholobium, commonly known as glory peas or wedge-peas, is a genus of plants in the pea family, Fabaceae and is endemic to Australia. Most species have compound leavescomposed of three leaflets and all have ten stamens which are free from each other and a distinctive arrangement of their sepals.
Description
Plants in the genus Gompholobium mostly have leaves composed of three separate leaflets but some species have simple leaves and others have pinnate leaves. The leaflets are arranged alternately along the stems and are usually narrow and have smooth edges. The flowers are usually arranged in groups on the ends of the branches, sometimes singly or in pairs. The sepals form a short tube with five lobes longer than the tube. The large "standard" petal at the back of the flower is circular to kidney-shaped and is larger than the other petals. There are ten free stamens and the ovary is. The fruit is an oblong to almost spherical legume containing two to many ovules.
Taxonomy and naming
The genus Gompholobium was first formally described in 1798 by James Edward Smith and the description was published in Transactions of the Linnean Society of London. In 2008, Gompholobium grandiflorum was designated the lectotype. The genus name is derived from the Ancient Greekwordsgomphos, meaning "bolt", "peg", or "nail" and lobos meaning a "capsule" or "pod" referring to "the inflated shape of the seed pods".
The status of the following species is unresolved:
Gompholobium aciculare Rchb.
Gompholobium amplexicaule Meisn.
Gompholobium aristatum var. laxum Benth.
Gompholobium asperulum Crisp
Gompholobium barbigerum DC.
Gompholobium cinereum Chappill
Gompholobium cyaninum Chappill
Gompholobium ellipticum Labill.
Gompholobium ericaefolium A. Cunn. ex Benth.
Gompholobium ericifolium A.Cunn. ex Benth.
Gompholobium fimbriatum Sm.
Gompholobium furcellatum Bonpl.
Gompholobium gairdnerianum Chappill
Gompholobium glaucescens A.Cunn.
Gompholobium glutinosum Chappill
Gompholobium heterophyllum A.Cunn. ex G.Don
Gompholobium hirsutum Paxton
Gompholobium karijini Chappill
Gompholobium lanatum A.Cunn. ex G.Don
Gompholobium laxum Chappill
Gompholobium maculatum Andrews
Gompholobium muticum Chappill
Gompholobium pedunculare DC.
Gompholobium pedunculare Lodd.
Gompholobium psoraleaefolium Salisb.
Gompholobium pungens Chappill
Gompholobium roseum Chappill
Gompholobium setifolium Sieber ex Benth.
Gompholobium sparsum A.Cunn. ex Benth.
Gompholobium stenophyllum F.Muell.
Gompholobium tenue Lindl.
Gompholobium tetrathecoides Sieber ex DC.
Gompholobium venulosum Lindl.
Gompholobium versicolor Lindl.
Gompholobium wonganense Chappill
Ecology
Toxicity of plants of the genus was suspected and proven to be fatal to sheep, goats and other livestock introduced by the pastoralists at the Swan River Colony. This was reported by James Drummond in Hooker's London journal of botany 1842.