Equisetum | |
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Vegetative stem of Equisetum telmateia with a whorl (at each node) of branches and dark-tipped leaves
Early Jurassic to present | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | |
Division: | |
Class: | Equisetopsida
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Order: | Equisetales
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Family: | Equisetaceae
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Genus: | Equisetum
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The horsetails are a class in the Pteridophyta (ferns). They were one of the most important plant groups in the Palaeozoic era.
For over 100 million years they were varied, and dominated the understorey of late Paleozoic forests. They are seen in the coal measures of the Carboniferous period, and some were trees reaching up 30 metres.[1] The group is now almost extinct, but one genus survives. They are vascular plants that reproduce by spores and not by seeds. The name horsetail came because the branched species somewhat look like a horse's tail.