Swainsona purpurea, commonly known as purple Swainson-pea or purple Darling pea,[1] is a species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae and is endemic to arid areas of inland Australia. It is an erect or spreading annual or perennial plant with imparipinnate leaves with 3 to 11 mostly linear or elliptic leaflets, and racemes of 3 to about 20 purple flowers.
Swainsona purpurea is an erect or spreading perennial or annual plant, that typically grows to a height of up to and has softly-hairy stems. The leaves are imparipinnate, mostly long with 3 to 11 linear or elliptic leaflets, the leaflets mostly long and wide. The flowers are arranged in racemes long of 3 to about 20, on a peduncle wide, each flower usually long. The sepals are joined at the base, forming a tube long with lobes much shorter than the sepal tube. The petals are purple, the standard petal mostly long and about as wide, the wings mostly long, and the keel about long and deep.[2] Flowering occurs from August to October,[3] and the fruit is a spindle-shaped to elliptic pod long with the remains of the style wide.
This species was first formally described in 1948 by Alma Theodora Lee who gave it the name Swainsona stipularis var. purpurea in Contributions from the New South Wales National Herbarium.[4] In 1990 Joy Thompson raised it to species status as S. purpurea in the journal Telopea.[5] The specific epithet (purpurea) means "purple".[6]
Swainsona purpurea grows in low-lying areas or on dunes, often near the edges of salt lakes and is widespread in inland Western Australia and South Australia, and in adjacent areas of the Northern Territory, Queensland and the far west of New South Wales.[7]