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Equisetum

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Equisetum

any pteridophyte plant of the genus Equisetum, comprising the horsetails. The plant is herbaceous, has rhizomes and a vertical stem with whorls of scale leaves, and is often found growing in water and damp conditions. It is the last living representative of the order Equisetales, members of which, during the time of the dinosaurs, grew as high as trees and were probably a major food source.
Collins Dictionary of Biology, 3rd ed. © W. G. Hale, V. A. Saunders, J. P. Margham 2005
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References in periodicals archive
In some areas Equisetum species grow in saline wetlands.
Equisetum is a relic of a different time, a different continent, and a different climate and it grows right here in new-millennium Kane County.
holosericea (hoary nettle), Stachys rigida (hedge-nettle), Equisetum laevigatum (horse-tail), Achillea millefolium (yarrow) and, on the drier edges, Rumex californicus (willow dock), Potentilla species (cinquefoil), Artemisia dracunculus (tarragon), Luzula comosa (hairy wood-rush), and other grasses and sedges.
This increase was supported mainly by the following species: Butomus umbellatus, Polygonum amphibium, Rumex hydrolapathum, Alisma plantago-aquatica, Carex spp., Glyceria maxima, Sagittaria sagittifolia, and Equisetum fluviatile.
EQUISETUM (PALEOZOIC ERA-PRESENT) I've only encountered this plant once, in a marshy patch of land during a walk through the countryside.
Any display which works to break health taboos must be good, and I found the plantation of dicksonias, cycads, equisetum and ferns exhilarating.
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