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Critically Imperiled Plant Profile
(Not Listed or Proposed under the Endangered Species Act)

Leaves, stems, and flower stalks are densely glandular-puberulent, usually with adhering sand grains. Photo by Leigh A. Johnson.

Aliciella tenuis range map.
Aliciella tenuis, Mussentuchit gilia
- Also known as: Gilia tenuis
Threats
- Oil and gas exploration and development
- Off-road vehicle use and recreational impacts
- Sand and gravel quarrying
- Road construction and maintenance
- Pesticide use
- Collection by rock garden enthusiasts
- Grazing and trampling by livestock
- Competition from noxious weeds
- Climate change
Conservation Status
National Forest and Grassland Occurrence
More Information

Geographically restricted to central Utah, Mussentuchit gilia grows on limestone or sandstone, in open grass, shrub, and woodland communities, between 5,200 and 7,100 feet elevation. Photo by Leigh A. Johnson.

Mussentuchit gilia habitat. Photo by Leigh A. Johnson.

Mussentuchit gilia habitat. Photo by Leigh A. Johnson.

This species differs from its close relatives in its lavender flowers, slender stems, stamens that protrude from the flower tube, and less densely glandular corollas. Photo by Leigh A. Johnson.

Aliciella tenuis, Mussentuchit gilia. Photo by Leigh A. Johnson.

Aliciella tenuis, Mussentuchit gilia. Photo by Leigh A. Johnson.
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U.S. Forest Service
Rangeland Management
Botany Program
1400 Independence Ave., SW, Mailstop Code: 1103
Washington DC 20250-1103

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Location: http://www.fs.fed.us/wildflowers/rareplants/profiles/critically_imperiled/aliciella_tenuis/index.shtml
Last modified: Wednesday, 13-Oct-2010 14:35:20 EDT