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Equisetum: Biology and Management
Horsetails are members of the genus Equisetum, the only genus in the family Equisetaceae . There are 15 species of equisetum found worldwide; field horsetail (Equisetum arvense) and scouring rush (Equisetum hyemale) are the most common species in Iowa.
crops.extension.iastate.edu
crops.extension.iastate.edu
Equisetum - Wikipedia
Equisetum (/ˌɛkwɪˈsiːtəm/; horsetail) is the only living genus in Equisetaceae, a family of vascular plants that reproduce by spores rather than seeds.
en.wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
Equisetum hyemale - Plant Finder - Missouri Botanical Garden
Equisetum hyemale, commonly called scouring rush or rough horsetail, is a non-flowering, rush-like, rhizomatous, evergreen perennial which typically grows 3-5' ...
www.missouribotanicalgarden.org
www.missouribotanicalgarden.org
equisetum
equisetum Bot. (ɛkwɪˈsiːtəm) Pl. equisetums, -a. [a. L. equisētum (more correctly equisætum), f. equus horse + sæta bristle.] A genus of plants called popularly Horsetail or Mare's-tail; the typical genus of the family Equisetaceæ.1830 Lyell Princ. Geol. I. 101 The fossil ferns, equiseta, and other ...
Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai
Equisetum - Jepson Herbarium - University of California, Berkeley
Habit: Perennial herb from rhizome. Stem: annual to perennial herb, generally erect, of 2 kinds (sterile, fertile) or not; internodes with lengthwise ...
ucjeps.berkeley.edu
ucjeps.berkeley.edu
Equisetum L. - GBIF
Equisetum L. · 345,842 occurrences with images · 2,122,019 georeferenced records · Filters · References · vernacular names · Appears in 120 Checklist datasets:.
www.gbif.org
www.gbif.org
Frenemies—Making Peace with Native Weeds: Horsetails ...
Horsetails do not seem finicky about location as long as it is lean and free of competition. This is probably the difficult-to-control Equisetum arvense.
www.wnps.org
www.wnps.org
Meet The Living FOSSIL Equisetum giganteum - YouTube
Full Episode Link: https://youtu.be/xmbhxGkumjw Chad Husby of Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden shares nuggets of information on the ...
www.youtube.com
www.youtube.com
Equisetum arvense (Field Horsetail) - Missouri Wildflowers Nursery
Field horsetail is circumpolar and found from Alaska to Brazil and England to Japan. Historically, it has been used as a diuretic, a component of dyes and ...
mowildflowers.net
mowildflowers.net
Equisetum hyemale - Horsetail, Scouring Rush - Hoffman Nursery
It is an ancient plant that is believed to be approximately 350 million years old. Equisetum hyemale was used by native people as a scouring brush.
hoffmannursery.com
hoffmannursery.com
Equisetum - Michigan Flora
Equisetum is an unmistakable element of our flora, and our 10 species are normally quite distinct. However, the scouring rushes (E. hyemale, E. laevigatum, and ...
michiganflora.net
michiganflora.net
Equisetum ramosissimum
Equisetum ramosissimum , known as branched horsetail, is a species of evergreen horsetail (genus Equisetum, subgenus Hippochaete). E. r. subsp. debile is one of the largest forms of Equisetum reaching a height of .
References
ramosissimum
Flora of Malta
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
Equisetum dimorphum
Equisetum dimorphum is an extinct horsetail species of the family Equisetaceae, and one of the oldest records of the genus Equisetum. As Equisetum thermale, another Jurassic fossil Equisetum from Argentina, E. dimorphum shows a combination of characters from both living subgenera, Equsietum
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
Equisetum giganteum
Equisetum giganteum, with the common name southern giant horsetail, is a species of horsetail native to South America and Central America, from central Description
It is one of the largest horsetails, growing tall, exceeded only by the closely allied Equisetum myriochaetum (up to relying on surrounding
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
Equisetum sylvaticum
Equisetum sylvaticum, the wood horsetail, is a horsetail (family Equisetaceae) native to the Northern Hemisphere, occurring in North America and Eurasia Taxonomy
Linnaeus was the first to describe wood horsetail with the binomial Equisetum sylvaticum in his Species Plantarum of 1753.
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org