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Integument vs. Testa — What's the Difference?

Integument vs. Testa — What's the Difference?

Difference Between Integument and Testa

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Compare with Definitions

Integument

In biology, integument is the natural covering of an organism or an organ, such as its skin, husk, shell, or rind.It derives from integumentum, which is Latin for "a covering". In a transferred or figurative sense, it could mean a cloak or a disguise.

Testa

The protective, often hard outer coat of a seed.

Integument

A natural outer covering or coat, such as the skin of an animal or the membrane enclosing an organ.

Testa

(botany) A seed coat.
The testa develops from the tissue, the integument, originally surrounding the ovule.

Integument

(Botany) The outermost layer or layers of an ovule.
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Testa

(marine biology) The external calciferous shell, or endoskeleton, of an echinoderm; the test.

Integument

A shell or other outer protective layer.

Testa

Protective outer layer of seeds of flowering plants

Integument

(biology) An outer protective covering such as the feathers or skin of an animal, a rind or shell.

Integument

(botany) The outer layer of an ovule, which develops into the seed coat.

Integument

That which naturally invests or covers another thing, as the testa or the tegmen of a seed; specifically (Anat.), a covering which invests the body, as the skin, or a membrane that invests a particular part.

Integument

An outer protective covering such as the skin of an animal or a cuticle or seed coat or rind or shell

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