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Tuesday, August 28, 2012
Feds to Consider Rocky Mountain Monkeyflower for Listing
Rare, Unique Plant Vulnerable Due to Specialized Habitat Requirements, Proximity to Human Recreation
Contact: Taylor Jones (303) 353-1490
Washington, D.C. – The U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service (Service) will review the Rocky Mountain monkeyflower (Mimulus gemmiparus) for potential
listing under the Endangered Species Act. There are
only seven known populations of this rare plant, occurring on 26 acres
scattered across Rocky Mountain National Park and five Front Range counties in
Colorado. Nearly 90 percent of documented plants, found on 54 percent of the
known occupied habitat, are threatened by inadvertent trampling by humans
during off-trail hiking, scrambling, and rock-climbing.
“We are pleased that the Service is
taking action to review the status of this plant,” said Taylor Jones,
Endangered Species Advocate for WildEarth Guardians. “It is a unique member of
Colorado’s floral community and deserves federal protection.”
WildEarth Guardians requested
protection for the monkeyflower in 2007 as part of our petition to list 206 “imperiled”
and “critically imperiled” species in the Rocky Mountains, as determined by
NatureServe. The Service did not consider the information presented to be
sufficient to review the species for protection. However, presented with additional
information in a new petition submitted September 30, 2011, the Service has now
decided to initiate a 12-month status review to determine if the species
warrants listing.
The Rocky Mountain
monkeyflower is a small annual herb measuring 1 to 10 centimeters tall. It
grows in spruce-fir-aspen communities and inhabits moist, seepy environments,
frequently on ledges or beneath overhangs at the base of cliffs. These areas
are also popular with hiking and rock-climbing recreationists, who
inadvertently trample the plant. The species is also vulnerable due to its short
lifespan, asexual reproduction strategy, and small population size, combined
with increasingly drier habitat conditions and threats from wildfires.
The Rocky Mountain monkeyflower’s unique asexual
reproduction strategy is not known to occur in any other flowering plant. The plant
produces propagules, embryo-like growths with rudimentary leaves and roots, at
the base of its leaves. When the mature plant dies at the end of the growing
season, these propagules – called bulbils or gemmae – shear off and are carried
by wind or water to a new site, where they overwinter underground and germinate
like seeds the following spring.
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