Smooth Scouring Rush

Equisetum laevigatum

Equisetum laevigatum is a species of horsetail known by the common names smooth horsetail and smooth scouring rush. This plant is native to much of North America except for northern Canada and southern Mexico.
Equisetum_2024-04-20 SW Michigan USA Horsetail - just the very top of the plant.  I'm guessing Equisetum laevigatum
Looked like it had overwintered and a bit weathered but when magnified became interesting... I blurred the background but left the plant alone- it looks like this (really)
https://www.jungledragon.com/image/159479/equisetum2_2024-04-20.html
 Equisetum laevigatum,Geotagged,Smooth Scouring Rush,Spring,United States

Appearance

It is usually found in moist areas in sandy and gravelly substrates. It may be annual or perennial. It grows narrow green stems sometimes reaching heights exceeding 1.5 meters. The leaves at the nodes are small, scale-like brownish sheaths and there are occasionally small, spindly branches.

The sterile stem is green and usually has no branches, though short stubby branches may develop on some plants. The “leaves” are reduced to a sheath that surrounds the stem, with 10 to 32 black teeth around the top. The teeth fall off as the season progresses, leaving a thin dark ring around the top of the sheath.

The stem is firm, the central cavity mostly 12.7 mm to 20 mm the diameter of the stem.

Fertile stems are like sterile stems, but with a 12.7 mm to 25 mm long cone at the tip of the stem. Cones have a blunt tip or may have a tiny, inconspicuous sharp tip.

Aerial stems lasting less than a year, occasionally overwintering in the southwestern United States, usually unbranched, 20--150 cm; lines of stomates single; ridges 10--32. Sheaths green, elongate, 7--15 × 3--9 mm; teeth 10--32, articulate and usually shed early, leaving dark rim on sheath. Cone apex rounded to apiculate with blunt tip; spores green, spheric. 2 n =216.
Equisetum2_2024-04-20 SW Michigan USA Horsetail -  I'm guessing Equisetum laevigatum
Looked like it had overwintered and a bit weathered but when magnified became interesting.
https://www.jungledragon.com/image/159477/equisetum_2024-04-20_sw_michigan_usa.html
 Equisetum laevigatum,Geotagged,Smooth Scouring Rush,Spring,United States

Naming

Equisetum laevigatum A. Braun, Amer. J. Sci. Arts. 46: 87. 1844.
Equisetum funstonii A.A. Eaton
Equisetum kansanum J.H. Schaffner

Schaffner named this species Equisetum kansanum because he applied the name E. laevigatum to what we now know is the hybrid E. × ferrissii, a hybrid between Equisetum hyemale and E. laevigatum. The coarser-stemmed, occasionally persistent forms in the southwestern United States have been called Equisetum funstonii.
smooth scouring rush  Equisetum laevigatum,Geotagged,Smooth Scouring Rush,Spring,United States

Habitat

Part shade, sun; sandy or gravelly soil; wet meadows, ditches.

Reproduction

By spores and rhizomes. Spore cones maturing in spring--early summer.

References:

Some text fragments are auto parsed from Wikipedia.

http://www.efloras.org/florataxon.aspx?flora_id=1&taxon_id=233500620
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equisetum_laevigatum
https://www.minnesotawildflowers.info/fern/smooth-scouring-rush
Taxonomy
KingdomPlantae
DivisionPolypodiophyta
ClassPolypodiopsida
OrderEquisetales
FamilyEquisetaceae
GenusEquisetum
SpeciesEquisetum laevigatum