{{Short description|One of two bracts enclosing a flower spikelet in grasses}} {{Other uses}} [[File:Urochloa mosambicensis spikelet12 annotated - Flickr - Macleay Grass Man.jpg|thumb|250px|right|Upper and lower glumes of ''Urochloa mosambicensis'', a grass]] In botany, a '''glume''' is a bract (leaf-like structure) below a spikelet in the inflorescence (flower cluster) of grasses (Poaceae) or the flowers of sedges (Cyperaceae). There are two other types of bracts in the spikelets of grasses: the lemma and palea.
In grasses, two bracts known as "glumes" form the lowermost organs of a spikelet (there are usually two but one is sometimes reduced; or rarely, both are absent).<ref name=Stace>{{cite book|last=Stace|first=C. A.|author-link= Stace, C. A.|year=2010|title=New Flora of the British Isles|edition=3|publisher=Cambridge University Press|location = Cambridge, U.K.| isbn=9780521707725|pages=974–77}}</ref> Glumes may be similar in form to the lemmas, the bracts at the base of each floret.
In sedges, by contrast, a glume is a scale at the base of each flower in a spikelet.<ref name=BSBI>{{cite book|first1=AC|last1=Jermy|first2=DA |last2=Simpson|first3=MJY|last3=Foley|first4=MS|last4=Porter|date=2007|title=Sedges of the British Isles|publisher=Botanical Society of Britain and Ireland|isbn=9780901158352|page=521}}</ref>
==References== {{reflist}}
Category:Plant morphology