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integument and organ
As a general term in biology the word " integument " refers most commonly to the natural covering of an organism or an organ, such as its skin, husk, shell, or rind.
* Dorsal artery of the penis ( example of integument enclosing an internal organ )

integument and typically
Gymnosperms typically have one integument ( unitegmic ) while angiosperms typically have two ( bitegmic ).

integument and would
Thus it appears as if some form of feathers or down-like integument would have been present in all maniraptorans, at least when they were young.
If even a tiny fraction of these additional data, including information on skeletal structure, soft-tissue morphology, integument, behaviour, genetics, etc., were included in the analysis, the faint phylogenetic signal produced by the presence of wings in birds and bats would be overwhelmed by the preponderance of data supporting the ( human, bat )( bird, crocodile ) tree.

integument and tissue
The seed coat ( the testa ) develops from the tissue, the integument, originally surrounding the ovule.
It is composed of a thin plate of yellow elastic cartilage, covered with integument, and connected to the surrounding parts by ligaments and muscles ; and to the commencement of the external acoustic meatus by fibrous tissue.
In adventitious embryony ( sporophytic apomixis ), an embryo is formed directly ( not from a gametophyte ) from nucellus or integument tissue ( see nucellar embryony ).
It is covered by the fascia and the integument, and stands out prominently behind the bone ; the gap is filled up with areolar and adipose tissue.
A few angiosperms produce vascular tissue in the outer integument, the orientation of which suggests that the outer surface is morphologically abaxial.
The junctional tissue is reduced to a slender fibrous thread, almost avascular, and all the tissues beyond the constricting band is repressed by a fibro-fatty mass covered by hyperkeratotic integument.
Nutrients from the plant travel through vascular tissue in the funiculus and outer integument through the chalaza into the nucellus.
It is closely connected to the integument by the firm, dense, fibro-fatty layer which forms the superficial fascia of the scalp: it is attached to the pericranium by loose cellular tissue, which allows the aponeurosis, carrying with it the integument to move through a considerable distance.

integument and such
Derivative terms include various adjectival forms such as integumentary ( e. g. system ), integumental ( e. g. integumental glands, " peltate glands, the integument being raised like a bladder due to abundant secretion ") and integumented ( as opposed to bare ).

integument and around
Rathke pointed out that on the surface of certain folds of the integument, especially in the region of the jaws, are found in all Crocodilia certain small, scattered, wart-like elevations, around each of which is customarily a narrow, shallow, circular groove ; they usually have a dark brown but sometimes a gray or even white color.

integument and .
Its integument, unlike that of most other dolphin species, is characterised by a well-developed dermal layer with a dense network of fascicles of collagen fibers.
Posteriorly, they are not really joined, but appear to become lost in the neighboring integument, ending close to, and nearly parallel to, each other.
Although the order was defined based on phylogenetic studies, a number of possible synapomorphies have been suggested, relating to the pollen tube, the seeds, the thickness of the integument, and other aspects of the morphology.
In English " integument " is a fairly modern word, its origin having been traced back to the early seventeenth century.
C. elegans is unsegmented, vermiform, and bilaterally symmetrical, with a cuticle integument, four main epidermal cords and a fluid-filled pseudocoelomate cavity.
These layers serve to give elasticity to the integument, allowing stretching and conferring flexibility, while also resisting distortions, wrinkling, and sagging.
Tiny black spots appear on larval integument.
* Adventive embryony, also called sporophytic apomixis, sporophytic budding, or nucellar embryony: Here there may be a megagametophyte in the ovule, but the embryos do not arise from the cells of the gametophyte ; they arise from cells of nucellus or the integument.
It can be distinguished from ixodid ticks and argasid ticks by a combination of characters including the position of the stigmata, lack of setae, strongly corrugated integument, and form of the fenestrated plates.
Most live on the integument or gills of freshwater and marine invertebrates, but other hosts occur, including fish and even other ciliates, and other locations as well.
They have a thin, pale, segmented integument, and a segmented abdomen that terminates in a whip-like flagellum.
Whole grains enter each ovule through a microscopic gap in the ovule coat ( integument ) called the micropyle.
** Kafers: humanoids with heads and integument similar to some Terran insects ( the human name is from the German for " beetle "), with technological advancement close to humanity's, including interstellar travel capability.
The megasporangium bears an unopened distal extension protruding above the multilobed integument.
Occasionally, the consort will strike out at the competitor with the mid femora, which are equipped with an enlarged and hooked spine in both sexes that has been observed to draw the blood of the opponent when they are flexed against the body to puncture the integument.
Traits shared by species within the Lythraceae that distinguish them from belonging to other plant families are the petals being crumpled in the bud and the many-layered outer integument of the seed.

organ and zoology
In botany the senses are similar to those in zoology, referring to the covering of an organ, but when the context indicates nothing to the contrary, the word commonly refers to an envelope of one or more cell layers covering the ovule, leaving only a pore, the micropyle, through which the pollen tube can enter.
* Tympanum ( zoology ), a hearing organ / gland in frogs and toads, a flat red oval on both sides of a frog's head
In anatomy and zoology the cortex ( Latin: " bark ", " rind ", " shell " or " busk ") is the outermost ( or " superficial ") layer of an organ.

organ and typically
In the English-speaking world, worship is typically accompanied by organ or piano, though in recent years a few ecclesias have promoted the use of other instruments ( e. g. strings, wind and brass as mentioned in the Psalms ).
Peroxisomal disorders are a class of medical conditions that typically affect the human nervous system as well as many other organ systems.
Snakes and limbless lizards typically possess only the right lung as a major respiratory organ ; the left lung is greatly reduced, or even absent.
During this phase, organ dysfunction and severe bleeding, typically from the gastrointestinal tract, may occur.
In vascular plants, the root is the organ of a plant that typically lies below the surface of the soil.
Hemorrhagic symptoms typically occur late and herald the end of the early organ phase, leading either to eventual recovery or worsening & death.
This group contains some 4, 000 species found all over the world, in which the vocal organ typically is developed in such a way as to produce a diverse and elaborate bird song.
Endoscopy means looking inside and typically refers to looking inside the body for medical reasons using an endoscope, an instrument used to examine the interior of a hollow organ or cavity of the body.
Stage III carcinomas typically have been found to have spread to regional lymph nodes, tissues, and / or organ structures, while Stage IV tumors have already metastasized through the blood to distant sites, tissues, or organs.
Calvinist services did not typically include organ playing due to the belief in what is now called the Regulative Principle.
TSS resulting from infection with the bacterium Staphylococcus aureus typically manifests in otherwise healthy individuals with high fever, accompanied by low blood pressure, malaise and confusion, which can rapidly progress to stupor, coma, and multiple organ failure.
Chronic epididymitis will typically lead to permanent damage or even destruction of the epididymis and testicle ( resulting in infertility and / or hypogonadism ), and infection may spread to any other organ or system of the body.
When attacked, the larvae will expose the osmeterium, a y-shaped organ typically folded up within the caterpillar.
In flowering plants, the ovule is typically located inside the organ of the flower called the gynoecium.
As with the electric guitar, the sound of the Hammond organ is typically amplified with a tube amplifier, which gives a growling, " overdriven " sound quality to the instrument.
* Stinger, an organ or body part found in various animals, typically arthropods, that usually delivers some kind of venom
A stinger or sting is a sharp organ found in various animals ( typically arthropods ) that delivers venom ( usually piercing the skin of another animal ).
The uterus typically opens into a common genital atrium that also received the distal male copulatory organ ( cirrus ) before immediately opening onto the outer surface of the worm.
is typically the major attachment organ.
* the issuing organ ( typically a monocratic judge or a court, or other figures that receive a legitimation by the system ).
A Persian geographer of the 9th century ( Ibn Khordadbeh ), mentioned in his lexicographical discussion of music instruments that Byzantines typically used urghun ( organ ), shilyani ( probably a type of harp or lyre ), şalandj ( probably a bagpipe ) and the bowed lyra ( Greek: λύρα-lūrā ) ( lyre ), an instrument similar to the Arabic Rabab.
The Paradise Motel's instrumentation typically features two guitars ( acoustic and electric ), bass, drums, Hammond organ, pedal steel, and occasional accompaniment from a string quartet.
It is defined as the combination of a plasma-cell proliferative disorder ( typically myeloma ), polyneuropathy, and effects on many other organ systems.
This was typically provided by an orchestra or theater pipe organ.

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