Glycine canescens

[2] A perennial living across the Outback in extremely hot and dry conditions, it is being studied for its potential to improve the cultivated soybean (Glycine max).

[6] The plant is Critically Endangered (CR) and considered to be facing an extremely high risk of extinction in the wild, according to the Victorian Flora and Fauna Guarantee Act 1988.

It is a scrambling perennial and grows primarily in the desert or dry shrubland biome, mainly inland districts.

[9][10][11] It is reported to be a good fodder, and flowering all year round especially July-Aug.[12] Taxonomy represents a formal structure of classes or types of objects within a knowledge domain by using a controlled vocabulary to make it easier to find related information.

The Technical Bulletin number 1268 A Revision of the Genus Glycine and its Immediate Allies for the United States Department of Agriculture.