Pultenaea luehmannii, commonly known as thready bush-pea,[2] is a species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae and is endemic to the Grampians National Park.
It is a diffuse, more or less prostrate sub-shrub with trailing branches, narrow elliptic leaves, and orange and dark brown flowers.
Flowering occurs from October to November and the fruit is an egg-shaped, sparsely hairy pod.
[2][3] Pultenaea luehmannii was first formally described in 1905 by Joseph Maiden in The Victorian Naturalist from specimens collected in 1904 in the Grampians National Park by Herbert Williamson.
[3] Thready push-pea grows in wet heath and on the edges of swamps and streams in the Grampians National Park in south-western Victoria.