Daviesia polyphylla is a species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae and is endemic to the south-west of Western Australia. It is a bushy, spreading, glabrous shrub with narrowly egg-shaped or elliptic, sharply-pointed phyllodes and yellow and dark red flowers.
Daviesia polyphylla is a bushy, spreading, glabrous shrub that typically grows up to high and wide. It has rather crowded, vertically flattened, narrowly egg-shaped or elliptic phyllodes long and wide that diverge from the branchlets at angles of 45–90°. The flowers are usually arranged singly or in pairs in leaf axils on a peduncle up to long, each flower on a pedicel long with spatula-shaped bracts long at the base. The sepals are long with lobes about long. The standard petal is elliptic with a notched centre, long, wide, and yellow-orange with a dark red base and pink edge. The wings are long and deep pink, the keel long and deep pink. Flowering mainly occurs from July to September and the fruit is an inflated, sharply-pointed, triangular pod long.[1]
Daviesia polyphylla was first formally described in 1839 by John Lindley in his book A Sketch of the Vegetation of the Swan River Colony from an unpublished description by George Bentham.[2] [3] The specific epithet (polyphylla) means "many-leaved".[4]
This daviesia grows in heath, mainly in near-coastal areas and on the Darling Range from near Green Head to Busselton in the Avon Wheatbelt, Geraldton Sandplains, Jarrah Forest and Swan Coastal Plain biogeographic regions of south-western Western Australia.
Daviesia polyphylla is listed as "not threatened" by the Western Australian Government Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions.