Scute
From Biocrawler, the free encyclopedia.
A scute or scutum (Latin scutum, plural: scuta "shield") is a horny, chitinous, or bony external plate or scale, as on the shell of a turtle or the underside of a snake. They are similar to scales, but unlike scales, they are derived from the epidermis. The term is also used to describe the scales of some armored mammals, such as the armadillo and the extinct glyptodon. The turtle's scutes in the carapace are as follows: nuchal scute, neural or vertebral scute, marginal scute, and pygal scute. Those in the plastron are: epiplastron, entoplastron, hyoplastron, and hypoplastron.
Scutes are also a type of osteoderm.

