Of the three component organs of the grass leaf – blade, sheath and ligule – the ligule is the least studied and the
least understood. Traditionally, it has been assumed to act in a passive way in protecting the culm and leaves that
it encloses from the entry of water, dust and harmful spores. However, ultrastructural and cytochemical studies
of the membranous ligules of several taxa, particularly Lolium species, have challenged that rather simplistic view
and suggest that these ligules play a more active role in the life of the grass plant as a secretory tissue. This review
summarizes the evidence for the latter notion, assesses the validity of both the passive and active hypotheses of
membranous ligule function and notes similarities between membranous grass ligules, root caps and lycopsid
ligules.