Kakabeak grows to around two metres high, with spreading branches producing leaf stalks up to 15 cm long bearing several pairs of small leaflets. They usually flower from spring through to early summer, but can flower twice a year or even year round.
Joseph Banks and
Daniel Solander collected specimens of
Clianthus in 1769 and
C. puniceus was described in 1835.
William Colenso identified two species of
Clianthus as early as 1847 and described
C. maximus in 1885. However
Thomas Kirk reduced
C. maximus to a variety of
C. puniceus in 1899. Peter Heenan reinstated
C. maximus as a separate species in 2000.
Clianthus forms a
clade with the genus
Carmichaelia, New Zealand broom. Together they form a larger
clade with the
Australian genus
Swainsona and the New Zealand
Montigena (scree pea).
Sturt's desert pea,
Swainsona formosa, has some similarities to kakabeak and was initially placed in the genus
Clianthus. The fourth genus of New Zealand native legumes is
Sophora, represented by eight species of
kowhai. The floral emblem of South Australia,
Swainsona formosa, formerly
Clianthus dampieri, is similar. ==History==