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plastron

  (plăs'trən) pronunciation
n.
  1. A metal breastplate worn under a coat of mail.
  2. A quilted pad worn by fencers to protect the torso and side.
  3. A trimming on the front of a bodice.
  4. The front of a man's dress shirt.
  5. The front panel of the tunic of a uniform, usually of a different color than the rest.
  6. Zoology. The ventral part of the shell of a turtle or tortoise.

[French, from Old French, from Old Italian piastrone, augmentative of piastra, thin metal plate. See piaster.]

plastral plas'tral (-trəl) adj.
 
 

Skeletal structure protecting the abdomen of chelonians.

Plastron of the tortoise. By permission from Aspinall V, O'Reilly M, Introduction to Veterinary Anatomy and Physiology, Butterworth Heinemann, 2004
 
Wikipedia: plastron
The plastron of a common musk turtle.
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The plastron of a common musk turtle.

The plastron is the nearly flat part of the shell structure of a turtle or tortoise, what one would call the belly, similar in composition to the carapace; with an external layer of horny material divided into plates called scutes and an underlying layer of interlocking bones.

In certain families there is a hinge between the pectoral and abdominal scutes allowing the turtle to almost completely enclose itself. In certain species the sex of a testudine can be told by whether the plastron is concave, male or convex, female. This is because of the mating position.

The plastral scutes join along a central seam down the middle of the plastron. The relative lengths of the seam segments can be used to help identify a species of turtle or tortoise. There are six laterally symmetric pairs of scutes on the plastron: gular, humeral, pectoral, abdominal, femoral, and anal (going from the head to the tail down the seam).

Indicating that the abdominal and gular scute seams are approximately the same length and the the femoral and pectoral seams are approximately the same length. Comparison of the plastral formulas provides distinction between the two species.

Turtle plastrons were used by the ancient Chinese in a type of divination called plastromancy. See also oracle bones.

See also

  • "Plastron" is also the name of a half-jacket used in the sport of fencing.
  • "Plastron" is also the name of a broad piece of material placed on the chest of certain military uniforms and held in place by two rows of buttons. The plastron was a popular feature of military dress during the period 1800-1914, when it was commonly worn by lancer and uhlan regiments in various European armies. It was also worn by light dragoon regiments in the British Army and by infantry and artillery units in the Imperial Russian Army. Plastrons were usually in contrasting colours to those of the tunics or coats that they were attached to.
  • "Plastron" is also the name of the bulge on an aircraft, such as the Airbus A340, under the fuselage between the wings that is used to correct airflow around the engine pylons.
  • A "plastron" is also a thin permanent layer of air around the body of some aquatic insects, held in place by hydrophobic hairs, and acting as a physical gill.
  • "Plastron" is also the name of a leading global manufacturer of precision coil bobbins for the electronics industry. Founded in 1970, it is now part of Cosmo Corporation.

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    Copyrights:

    Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
    Veterinary Dictionary. Saunders Comprehensive Veterinary Dictionary 3rd Edition. Copyright © 2007 by D.C. Blood, V.P. Studdert and C.C. Gay, Elsevier. All rights reserved.  Read more
    Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Plastron" Read more

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