, Lancashire, UK It is a
herbaceous perennial plant, with separate green
photosynthetic sterile stems, and pale yellowish non-photosynthetic
spore-bearing fertile stems. The sterile stems, produced in late spring and dying down in late autumn, are (rarely to ) tall (the tallest species of horsetail outside of tropical regions) and diameter, heavily branched, with whorls of 14–40 branches, these up to long, diameter and unbranched, emerging from the axils of a ring of
bracts; the main stem itself is whitish, without chlorophyll or stomata. The fertile stems are produced in early spring before the sterile shoots, growing to tall with an apical spore-bearing
strobilus long and broad, and no side branches. The spores disperse in mid spring, with the fertile stems dying immediately after spore release. It also spreads by means of rhizomes that have been observed to penetrate into wet clay soil, spreading laterally in multiple layers. Occasionally plants produce stems that are both fertile and photosynthetic. ==Distribution==