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Horsetail
Horsetail Scientific Name:Equisetum arvense L. Scientific Name Synonyms:None known Symbol:EQAR Description:Life Span: Perennial Origin: Native Season: Cool Growth Characteristics: A forb with aerial, jointed stems, which occur in two different forms. A single, simple, cone-bearing stem grows in early spring, and a vegetative, non-fertile stem grows after the first. This second stem has many whorls of slender, green-jointed branches. Roots are tuber-bearing and rhizomatous. Flowers/Inflorescence: It lacks flowers, but has a single cone, ¾ to 1 ½ inches long. Fruits/Seeds: Reproduces by spores, which look like a light yellow powder. Leaves: Small and scale-like, often non-green, whorled, and united at the base to form a sheath around the stem. Ecological Adaptations:Horsetail occurs in woods, fields, meadows and swamps, and moist soils alongside streams, rivers, and lakes, and in disturbed areas. It usually occurs on moist sites but can also be found on dry and barren sites such as roadsides, borrow pits, and railway embankments. Soils: Wet soils Associated Species: Baltic rush, sedges. Uses and Management:Horsetail is not an important range forage for livestock, and excessive amounts (more than 20 percent) in hay can cause scours, paralysis, and death in horses. Usually animals avoid the plant. |
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