(Redirected from Awn (Botany))

Wild rye ear with awns
In
botany, an 'awn' is either a hair- or bristle-like appendage on a larger structure, or in the case of the
Asteraceae, a stiff needle-like element of the
pappus.
Awns are characteristic of many
grasses (
Poaceae), where they extend from the
lemmas of the
florets. They often make up the hairiness or other distinctive appearance of
foxtails and the like. Awns may be long (several centimeters) or short, straight or curved, single or multiple per floret. Some genera are named after their awns, such as the
three-awns (''Aristida'').