Ferns, lycophytes, and their extinct free-sporing relatives
Equisetum sylvaticum
Equisetum sylvaticumL.
Family: Equisetaceae
[Allostelites sylvaticum (L.) Börner, moreEquisetum capillare Hoffm., Equisetum silvaticum var. squarrosum A. A. Eat., Equisetum sylvaticum f. capillare (G. F. Hoffmann) Murr, Equisetum sylvaticum f. multiramosum Fern., Equisetum sylvaticum f. neoserotinum Vict., Equisetum sylvaticum f. opsistachyum Lepage, Equisetum sylvaticum f. serum Lepage, Equisetum sylvaticum f. tardatum Lepage, Equisetum sylvaticum var. multiramosum (Fern.) Wherry, Equisetum sylvaticum var. pauciramosum Milde]
Aerial stems dimorphic; vegetative stems brownish to green, branched, 25--70 cm; hollow center 1/6--1/3 stem diam. Sheaths squarish in face view, 3--6 × 2.5--6 mm; teeth reddish, 8--18, papery, 3--10 mm, coherent in 3--4 large groups. Branches in regular whorls, delicate, arching, branched, solid; ridges 3--4; valleys channeled; 1st internode of each branch longer than subtending stem sheath; sheath teeth attenuate. Fertile stems brown, with stomates, initially unbranched, persisting and becoming branched and green after spore discharge. 2 n =216. Cones maturing in late spring. Moist forests; 0--2800 m; Greenland; St. Pierre and Miquelon; Alta., B.C., Man., N.B., Nfld., N.W.T., N.S., Ont., P.E.I., Que., Sask., Yukon; Alaska, Conn., Del., Idaho, Iowa, Maine, Md., Mass., Mich., Minn., N.H., N.J., N.Y., N.Dak., Ohio, Pa., R.I., S.Dak., Vt., Va., Wash., W.Va., Wis.; Europe; n Asia to ne China, Japan in Hokkaido.
Stems annual, dimorphic, the sterile ones 3-7 dm, 1.5-3 mm thick, mostly 10-18-ridged, each ridge with 2 rows of sharp hooked spinules, the stomates in 2 bands in the furrows, the central cavity larger than the vallecular ones and most more than half the diameter of the stem, the sheaths 1-2 cm, basally green, distally brown, with persistent, irregularly connate brown teeth; branches regularly whorled, solid, 4-5-angled, commonly again branched; the first internode commonly longer than the associated sheath of the main stem; fertile stems subprecocious, at first simple and pale, later producing whorls of green, mostly compound branches and often themselves becoming green; cones long-peduncled, 1.5-3 cm, deciduous, not apiculate. Cool moist woods; circumboreal, in Amer. s. to Md., W.Va., Ky., and Io.
Gleason, Henry A. & Cronquist, Arthur J. 1991. Manual of vascular plants of northeastern United States and adjacent Canada. lxxv + 910 pp.