About Pultenaea hispidula R.Br. ex Benth.
Pultenaea hispidula, commonly known as rusty bush-pea, is an erect, spreading shrub with many drooping, densely hairy branches. It typically reaches a height of around 1 metre (3 feet 3 inches). Its leaves are oblong to egg-shaped, with the narrower end positioned toward the base, measuring 4โ8 mm (0.16โ0.31 in) long and 0.7โ3 mm (0.028โ0.118 in) wide. Lance-shaped stipules 1โ2 mm (0.039โ0.079 in) long grow at the base of each leaf. Flowers are arranged in dense clusters in leaf axils, near the ends of short side branches. Each flower is 5โ8 mm (0.20โ0.31 in) long, growing on a 1โ2 mm (0.039โ0.079 in) long pedicel. Broadly egg-shaped to narrow lance-shaped bracteoles 2.5โ4 mm (0.098โ0.157 in) long attach near the base of the sepal tube. The sepals are 3โ5.5 mm (0.12โ0.22 in) long. The standard petal is yellow to pale orange with red markings on its back, and is 6โ10 mm (0.24โ0.39 in) wide; the wing petals are yellow, and the keel is red or crimson. Flowering takes place from August to December. The fruit is an egg-shaped pod 4โ5 mm (0.16โ0.20 in) long. This species grows in forest, and sometimes in heath. It occurs in coastal New South Wales south from the Hawkesbury River, in Victoria south of the Great Dividing Range, and in the southeast of South Australia.