Peas


There are over 12,000 pea species across the globe including herbs, shrubs, climbers and trees. They are good colonisers of bare areas assisted by their ability to trap nitrogen from the air and increase soil fertility. Many of the native species are dispersed by ants and will flourish after fire.

The native herbs and smaller shrubs are vulnerable to live-stock grazing and mainly occur in areas where grazing has been excluded or intermittent, such as within some Travelling Stock Reserves.

Although relatively few in number woody introduced peas, such as brooms, Gorse or Tree Lucerne are significant weeds. Exotic woody peas are a poor planting choice, as they are likely to stray far beyond the garden path.

All flowers of this family have the “sweet pea” butterfly shape, comprised of five often brightly coloured petals: the large upright standard at the back, two small lateral wings and the lower keel of two petals that are mostly fused.

Pea plants are generally distinguished from each other by their form (herb, shrub etc), their leaf characteristics, the colour of their flowers and the size and shape of their seed pods. Ideally postings of pea plants will include photographs that encapsulate all these features.

Photographs should show whether leaves are a single blade, or if not the number of leaflets of which they are composed. Photographs should also try and capture the pair of stipules or appendages that may occur at the base of the leaf stem. They can be leaf-like, membranous or spine like.


Peas

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Discussion

JasonPStewart wrote:
14 Feb 2026
@Tapirlord and all – not in iNat at all !
Between 2019 and 2023 these my few sightings were added by myself in to iNat – the first and only sightings in iNat –
until i quit in disgust at gross abuse, by a small minority of other people there in iNat;
when i stood up to that minority of abuse, then more double–downed abuse lying was piled on top of that first lot of abuse .
Eventually, when, after my many attempts to seek:
truth–telling about the abuse, continuing to stand up to it, including calling it out and redress;
after i was accused of doing the abuse, after the ignoring of the initial abuse of me, and then blamed for the abuse of myself, by (again) a small minority of other people there, i quit and deleted all of my own 916 iNat sightings and all of my own many thousands of photographs;
including all of these few only _Cynometra roseiflora_ species sightings and their photographs (all) in iNat .

Cynometra roseiflora
JasonPStewart wrote:
14 Feb 2026
@Tapirlord and all – not in iNat at all !
In 2023 this my sighting was added by myself in to iNat – the first and only sighting in iNat –
until i quit in disgust at gross abuse, by a small minority of other people there in iNat;
when i stood up to that minority of abuse, then more double–downed abuse lying was piled on top of that first lot of abuse .
Eventually, when, after my many attempts to seek:
truth–telling about the abuse, continuing to stand up to it, including calling it out and redress;
after i was accused of doing the abuse, after the ignoring of the initial abuse of me, and then blamed for the abuse of myself, by (again) a small minority of other people there, i quit and deleted all of my own 916 iNat sightings and all of my own many thousands of photographs;
including all of the one and only _Archidendron kanisii_ species sighting and its photographs (all) in iNat .

Archidendron kanisii
Tapirlord wrote:
10 Feb 2026
It is

Cullen microcephalum
Untidy wrote:
1 Feb 2026
@MichaelMulvaney, I checked with Sarah Sharp who indicated that no Cullen have been planted. There are several naturally occurring populations. I must have come across one of those.

Cullen tenax
1 Feb 2026
Probably planted if only one present

Cullen tenax
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