Overview

Distribution

Equisetum scirpoides Michx.:
Canada (North America)
Greenland (North America)
Japan (Asia)
Russian Federation (Asia)
United States (North America)
China (Asia)
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National Distribution

Canada

Origin: Native

Regularity: Regularly occurring

Currently: Present

Confidence: Confident

United States

Origin: Unknown/Undetermined

Regularity: Regularly occurring

Currently: Unknown/Undetermined

Confidence: Confident

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Global Range: Circumboreal, south to Washington, Montana, Michigan, and Connecticut. Disjunct in the Black Hills of South Dakota and Wyoming (Crook County).

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Physical Description

Morphology

Description

Aerial stems persisting more than a year, unbranched, tortuous, 2.5--28 cm; lines of stomates single; ridges 6. Sheaths green proximally, black distally, elliptic in face view, 1--2.5 × 0.75--1.5 mm; teeth 3, dark with white margins, not articulate to sheath. Cone apex pointed; spores green, spheric. 2 n =216.
  • Flora of North America @ eFloras.org
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Ecology

Habitat

Comments: Moist thickets, mossy knolls, or spring banks, especially coniferous woods.

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Habitat & Distribution

Cones maturing in summer, or cones overwintering and shedding spores in spring. Wet woods, peat bogs, tundra; 0--1000 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, Idaho, Ill., Iowa, Maine, Mass., Mich., Minn., Mont., N.H., N.Y., S.Dak., Vt., Wash., Wis.; n Eurasia.
  • Flora of North America @ eFloras.org
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Population Biology

Number of Occurrences

Note: For many non-migratory species, occurrences are roughly equivalent to populations.

Estimated Number of Occurrences: 81 to >300

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Molecular Biology and Genetics

Molecular Biology

Statistics of barcoding coverage: Equisetum scirpoides

Barcode of Life Data Systems (BOLDS) Stats
Public Records: 6
Species: 14
Species With Barcodes: 1

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Conservation

Conservation Status

National NatureServe Conservation Status

Canada

Rounded National Status Rank: N5 - Secure

United States

Rounded National Status Rank: NNR - Unranked

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NatureServe Conservation Status

Rounded Global Status Rank: G5 - Secure

Reasons: The sp. is only rare in the periphery of its range (SD and IA).

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Wikipedia

Equisetum scirpoides

Equisetum scirpoides (Dwarf scouring rush, Dwarf Horsetail) Michx., Fl. Bor.-Amer. 2: 281 (1803). 2 n = 216. The smallest of the currently occurring representatives of the genus Equisetum (Horsetail). It occurs mainly in the area of the Arctic Circle in Alaska for the Indians and Greenlandii, Idaho, Montana, South Dakota, Minnesota, Iowa, Illinois, New York and New England. Creates a compact and dense clumps. Reaches a maximum height of about 30 cm. The assimilation and generative shoots are identical and grow together. The leaves reduced to a black sheath around the stem. The stems are green, unbranched, thick and about 1 mm with six ribs. The generative shoots with small cones dying after sowing the spores. The nodes occur at approximately 1 - 3 cm. The leaves are very small to about 1 mm, and arranged in around nodes. The corms are thin, yellow and brown. The roots very fine, black and densely surpassing the ground. Species grows best in the mud at the depth zone from 0 to 3 cm. Specimens reproduce primarily by vegetative division. Equisetum scirpoides is hardy and semi-evergreen. This species is quite a popular decorative plant seen in garden ponds, ornamental gardens and assumptions in nearly the whole world. E. scirpoides was discovered and described an eminent French botanist André Michaux. Detailed studies were conducted by the American botanist Oliver Atkins Farwell.[1]

Contents

Name

Equisetum, from the Latin, equus, "horse", and seta, "bristle, animal hair". Scirpoides, from the Latin, scirpus, "rush, bulrush". Scouring Rush, a reference to its early use for cleaning pots, made possible by its high silica content. Other common names include Dwarf Horsetail, Sedge Horsetail, Prele Faux-scirpe (Qué), Tradfräken (Swe), Dvergsnelle (Nor), Trad-Padderok (Dan), Hentokorte (Fin), Dwergholpijp (NL), Himedokusa (Jpn), Skrzyp arktyczny (PL).

Distribution

Austria, Finland, Norway, Spitsbergen, Sweden, Greenland, St. Pierre & MiqueIon, Canada (Alberta, British Columbia, Manitoba, New Brunswick, Newfoundland, N.W.Territories, Nunavut, Nova Scotia, Ontario, Prince Edward Isl., Quebec, Saskatchewan, Yukon), Alaska, USA (Idaho, Illinois, lowa, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, New Hampshire, New York, South Dakota, Vermont, Washington, Wisconsin), W-Siberia, C-Siberia, E-Siberia, Amur, Ussuri, Japan, Lithuania, Novaja Zemlja, Kamchatka, N-European Russia, Lithuania, Estonia, C-European Russia, E-European Russia.

Subspecies

Within Equisetum scirpoides there are two subspecies :

  • Equisetum scirpoides ssp. scirpoides (Michaux, Farwell) = Hippochaete scirpoides (Michaux, Farwell) - Main subspecies, grows up to about 30 cm. Low, slender, wiry, unbranched stems. Stems erect or prostrate, hollow, segmented, rough surfaced, green. Internodes about 4 apart with segments marked by ashy grey bands. Sterile and fertile stems alike. Twisting and wiry in form, branching rare. Sheaths tiny, 1 - 2.5 mm × 0.75 - 1.5 mm, with three teeth, dark with white margins. Cones usually 1 long with sharp pointed tips, borne on short stalks at the tips of fertile stems. Spores green, spheric. Rootstalk shiny black, creeping, freely branching, and wide spreading. Roots black to very dark brown.
  • Equisetum scirpoides ssp. walkowiaki (Walkowiak) = Equisetum scirpoides (ssp.) minus (Lawson, Milde) - Smaller subspecies, grows up to about 15 cm. The botanical characteristics identical with the main subspecies. Often seen primarily as an ornamental plant in Japan. Subspecies described by Scottish botanist George Lawson and eminent German botanist Carl August Julius Milde, but without a proper taxonomic name, which gave the Polish botanist Radosław Janusz Walkowiak (subsp. walkowiaki).

Identification

Identifiable as a Horsetail by the upright, hollow, jointed, cylindrical stems with inconsequential and easily overlooked leaves. Distinguished from other Horsetails by its low, slender, wiry, unbranched stems and its small size. This is the smallest living Horsetail. Field Marks, diminutive size, low, slender, wiry, unbranched stems.

See also

References

  1. ^ [1] The International Plant Names Index (IPNI)
  • Michael Hassler and Brian Swale, Equisetum species in the World – Equisetum (Horsetail) Taxonomy.
  • Michael Hassler and Bernd Schmitt, Checklist of Ferns and Lycophytes of the World – Equisetum Species Taxonomy.
  • Hauke, R. L. 1963, A taxonomic monograph of the genus Equisetum subgenus Hippochaete. Beihefte zur Nova Hedwigia 8: 1–123.
  • Pigott, Anthony 2001, National Collection of EquisetumSummary of Equisetum Taxonomy. Version of 2001-OCT-04. Retrieved 2008-NOV-20.
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