Chara hornemannii

Chara hornemannii
Chara hornemannii, bleached by drying
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Charophyta
Class: Charophyceae
Order: Charales
Family: Characeae
Genus: Chara
Species:
C. hornemannii
Binomial name
Chara hornemannii
Wallman 1853
Synonyms[1]
  • Lamprothamnium hornemannii (Wallman) F.K.Daily (1967)

Chara hornemannii is a species of charophyte, a green algae in the family Characeae.[1]

Description

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Typical of other members of the genus Chara, this alga is multicellular. As an alga, not a flowering plant, it produces no flowers. It inhabits freshwater, where it is attached to the muddy bottom, and its parts do not extend above the water. Its stems produce numerous whorled branches. Submerged, it is gray-green, but when removed from water, as when its ponds dries up, within just a few hours the sunlight may bleach it white. To the touch it is somewhat stiff and grainy, or even crunchy, because of mineral deposits covering its body.[2]

Shoots of taxa in the Characeae Family such as Chara species generally average 15–30 cm in length, (~6-12 inches). In that context, Chara hornemannii is considered a large species; specimens collected from Rodrigo de Freitas Lagoon, in the city of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil grew up to ~2 meters in length (~6.6 feet).[3]

Distribution

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The GBIF map of georeferenced records of the occurrence of Chara hornemannii shows it presence in the Americas from southern Canada to southern Brazil.[4]

Ecology

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Chara species in general dominate in aquatic environments at lower nutrient concentrations. Their influence on sedimentation, the return of sediment which has precipitated out of the water, and the presence of water column nutrients is assumed to be higher than the influence of most flowering plant species.[5]

Chara hornemannii appears able to survive in somewhat brackish water with low levels of salinity, but its presence declines as salt levels increase.[6]

American Coots feed on Chara hornemannii.[7]

Taxonomy

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In 1853, the species Chara hornemannii was first published formally by Swedish botanist Johan Haqvin Wallman in the book Försök till en systematisk uppställning af växtfamiljen Characeae, In Stockholm, Sweden. The type specimen described in the work was collected in the West Indies, and preserved in "Hornemann's Herbarium."[1]

There is an accepted variety, Chara hornemannii var. nordhoffiae T.F.Allen (1900), occurring in the U.S. state of California. Sometimes this variety is referenced by these two homotypic synonyms:

  • Chara nordhoffiae (T.F.Allen) C.B.Robinson (1906)
  • Chara hornemannii f. nordhoffiae (T.F.Allen) R.D.Wood (1962)[8]

The origin of the genus name Chara is unknown, though several theories are proposed.

The species name hornemannii commemorates the Danish botanist Jens Wilken Hornemann (1770-1841).

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References

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  1. ^ a b c Guiry, M.D.; Guiry, G.M. (13 January 2025). "Chara hornemannii Wallman 1853". algaebase.org. AlgaeBase. World-wide electronic publication, National University of Ireland, Galway. Retrieved August 22, 2025.
  2. ^ "Macroalgae (Chara)". aquaticbiologists.com. Aquatic biologists, inc. Retrieved August 22, 2025.
  3. ^ Bicudo, Carlos E. de M.; Bueno, Norma C. (April 30, 2013), Characeae Biomass: Is the Subject Exhausted?, Canada: Queen's University, retrieved August 23, 2025
  4. ^ Chara hornemannii Wallman, Global Biodiversity Information Facility, retrieved August 22, 2025
  5. ^ Hilt, Sabine (2015). "Regime shifts between macrophytes and phytoplankton – concepts beyond shallow lakes, unravelling stabilizing mechanisms and practical consequences" (PDF). Limnetica. 34 (2). Madrid. Spain: Asociación Ibérica de Limnología: 467–480. ISSN 0213-8409.
  6. ^ Frankovich, Thomas; Fourqurean, James (January 2011). "Submerged Aquatic Vegetation and Physico-Chemical Monitoring in the Florida Bay Mangrove Zone, Everglades National Park" (PDF). unam.mx. South Florida Natural Resources Center. Retrieved August 23, 2025.
  7. ^ "Search Results". globalbioticinteractions.org. Global Biotic Interactions (GloBI). Retrieved August 22, 2025.
  8. ^ Guiry, M.D.; Guiry, G.M. (23 August 2025). "Chara hornemannii var. nordhoffiae T.F.Allen 1900". algaebase.org. AlgaeBase. World-wide electronic publication, National University of Ireland, Galway. Retrieved August 23, 2025.