Excerpts from Jim Conrad's
Naturalist Newsletter

Entry dated November 7, 2023, from notes taken at Cascadas de La Piedad waterfall 3kms NW of the community of San Pablo, municipality of Almeaco de Bonfil; bedrock of volcanic andesite; N20.1008°, W100.0041°, elevation 2360 meters (7750ft); extreme southern Querétaro state, MÉXICO
FRAGILE STONEWORT

Fragile Stonewort, CHARA GLOBULARIS, habitat in flowing stream

Even during the ongoing two-year dry period classified by the "North American Drought Monitor" as an extreme D3 drought, a small stream of clear, cold water meandered across a livestock-grazed meadow atop a bed of hard volcanic andesite rock. Just before tumbling over a high ledge to create the picturesque Cascada de La Piedad, or Piety Waterfall, the above aquatic organism, anchored to the stream's bedrock bottom, undulated like thick green hair in the cold, streaming water.

Fragile Stonewort, CHARA GLOBULARIS, stem and leaves in hand

I called it an organism because it was unclear whether this was a plant or an alga. In my hand, it was somewhat similar to the Variable-leaf Watermilfoil, which is an aquatic flowering plant. However, leaves of watermilfoil species aren't segmented and nodular like the above. Also, in the above picture, note the relatively thick stem originating at the bottom, right corner and curving upwards. More slender sections branch off it, and then those sections also develop branches. Certain stems bear short, sharply tipped items which are leaves. The pictures shows a mishmash of branching stems and shorter leaves, and it takes some studying to sort things out.

Fragile Stonewort, CHARA GLOBULARIS, stem segment with leaves in hand

Above is a short stem section from which a whorl of leaves arises, as well as some longer stem segments.

Fragile Stonewort, CHARA GLOBULARIS, leaves close-up showing segments and bulges

Above, leaves are backlit by the sun, revealing that bulges tend to transmit light, while the slenderer setions don't. Seeing this, I began thinking that here was another species of stonewort, which is a "macroalga." Some experts regard alga as plants, while others think of them as "protists," a grab-bag category for organisms not clearly plant, animal, fungus, bacteria or archaean.

In Texas we ran into a similar stonewort which was determined to be the genus Chara. When I search for Chara species in our highland part of central Mexico, three species have been documented. Of those species the one by far most commonly observed, and the only one looking like our organism, is CHARA GLOBULARIS, often referred to as the Fragile Stonewort.

Chara globularis is distributed nearly worldwide, in both fresh and brackish waters, both in eutrophic waters rich in nutrients, and in nutrient-poor oligotrophic waters. It's a very adaptable species, or possibly a complex of fairly identical-looking species with different ecological requirements. Its taxonomy hasn't been studied in detail.

Pictures on the Internet often show individuals conspicuously loaded with black oospores. An oospore is a thick-walled cell resulting from sexual fertilization, as found among certain algae and fungi. It can be thought of as analogous to a seed. A good guess is that our nodular, segmented leaves show developing oospores, though I'm unsure whether the light-transmitting nodules would be the oospores, or the dark, slender areas between the nodules.

I find no clear mention of Chara globularis being used as food or medicine. However, the 2020 study by Mohammad Hossein Sayadi and others entitled "Cadmium and chromium levels in water and edible herbs in a risk assessment study of rural residents living in Eastern Iran," refers to the species as an edible herb in Iran.