Equisetum hyemale
Equisetum hyemale is an evergreen perennial herbaceous pteridophyte in the horsetail family Equisetaceae native to Eurasia and Greenland. It was formerly widely treated in a broader sense including a subspecies in North America, but this is now treated as a separate species, Equisetum praealtum.
Distribution
Equisetum hyemale is native to Iceland, Greenland, and central and northern Eurasia, including Kamchatka and Japan, where it forms clonal colonies in mesic habitats, often in heavy clay or sandy soils in riparian zones of rivers and streams where it can withstand occasional flooding, but also in lime-rich upland flushes and seeps, and can indicate their presence when not flowing. Other habitats include moist forest and woodland openings, lake and pond shores, ditches, marshes and swamps. It grows from between sea level to in elevation. It has been introduced into Tasmania.Description
Equisetum hyemale has vertical jointed reed-like stalks of medium to dark green. The hollow stems are up to in height, and are rarely branched. The stems are 3–6 mm thick with 10–30 conspicuous ridges, which are impregnated with silica and rough to the touch. The tiny leaves are joined around the stem, forming a narrow black-green band or sheath at each joint. Like other pteridophytes, the plant reproduces by spores and does not produce flowers or seeds.The stems remain green during winter in warmer climates, but are generally deciduous in cold climates. It forms dense spreading colonies in full to partial sun.
Taxonomy
Linnaeus was the first to describe rough horsetail with the binomial Equisetum hyemale in his Species Plantarum of 1753.Two Equisetum plants are sold commercially under the names Equisetum japonicum and Equisetum camtschatcense. These are both types of E. hyemale, although they may also be listed as varieties of E. hyemale.
Uses
Domestic
Boiled and dried Equisetum hyemale is used as traditional polishing material, similar to a fine grit sandpaper, in Japan.;Music
The stems are used to shape the reeds of reed instruments such as clarinets or saxophones.
Cultivation
Equisetum hyemale cultivated as an ornamental plant, for use in contained garden beds and planters, and in pots. It is a popular "icon plant" in contemporary Modernist and East Asian style garden design. Its tight verticality fits into narrow planting spaces between walkways and walls, and on small balconies.It is also used as an accent plant in garden ponds and ornamental pools, and other landscape water features, planted in submerged pots.
The plant is sometimes sold in the nursery trade as "barred horsetail" or "Equisetum japonicum", but is different in appearance to Equisetum ramosissimum var. japonicum.