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Perhaps the strongest argument for conserving wildlife and natural landscapes is that our goods and services ultimately come from raw materials and organisms, so a strong argument can be made that conserving natural landscapes and biodiversity is crucial to conserving a civilization’s health or well being. We can benefit from Nature in two ways—through (1) ecosystem services and by (2) observing and applying Nature’s structures, systems, and tools to our own civilization.
We can continue to capitalize from ecosystem services by preserving them. For example, it is wise to conserve wetlands, because wetlands act as a barrier, filtration system, and sponge. As a result, when wetlands are drained and mangroves are removed, the changed landscape is susceptible to flooding (think the major natural disasters that wrecked New Orleans and Burma).
We also capitalize from Nature by directly observing and studying Nature. For example, we find medicines from plants through ethnobotanical studies. However, perhaps the most exciting area of study is the field of biomimetics. Biomimetics infuses adaptations and applications found in Nature into everyday engineering. These services from Nature illustrate how we must continue to strive to save biodiversity.
The results of evolution provide efficient adaptations or solutions that allow organisms to survive. As a result, we can adapt Nature’s solutions to our own problems, and the utility provided by goods, machines, or tools that were made by using Nature as a template is enormous, but the process of taking, selecting, or applying observations from Nature into something people can utilize can be complex and difficult. From National Geographic:
But the main reason biomimetics hasn’t yet come of age is that from an engineering standpoint, nature is famously, fabulously, wantonly complex. Evolution doesn’t “design” a fly’s wing or a lizard’s foot by working toward a final goal, as an engineer would—it blindly cobbles together myriad random experiments over thousands of generations, resulting in wonderfully inelegant organisms whose goal is to stay alive long enough to produce the next generation and launch the next round of random experiments. To make the abalone’s shell so hard, 15 different proteins perform a carefully choreographed dance that several teams of top scientists have yet to comprehend. The power of spider silk lies not just in the cocktail of proteins that it is composed of, but in the mysteries of the creature’s spinnerets, where 600 spinning nozzles weave seven different kinds of silk into highly resilient configurations.
The multilayered character of much natural engineering makes it particularly difficult to penetrate and pluck apart. The gecko’s feet work so well not just because of their billions of tiny nanohairs, but also because those hairs grow on larger hairs, which in turn grow on toe ridges that are part of bigger toe pads, and so on up to the centimeter scale, creating a seven-part hierarchy that maximizes the lizard’s cling to all climbing surfaces. For the present, people cannot hope to reproduce such intricate nanopuzzles. Nature, however, assembles them effortlessly, molecule by molecule, following the recipe for complexity encoded in DNA. As engineer Mark Cutkosky says, “The price that we pay for complexity at small scales is vastly higher than the price nature pays.
Nonetheless, biomimetics is an exciting field for any young person interested in biology, sustainability, and engineering to enter. Consider these six technological advances that were inspired by observing and studying Nature.
Velcro is a revolutionary fabric, and it is perhaps the most well-known biomaterial, which has many uses. Swiss agricultural engineer George de Mestral accidentally discovered it when he observed some “burs plucked from his pants and dog’s coat after a hike in 1948.” Velcro has household, industrial, space program, and medical applications.

PHOTO INFORMATION: The bur photograph is by Robert Clark, and it was found in a National Geographic article, “Biomimetics: Design by Nature,” by Tom Mueller. The scanning electron Velcro image is via Jim Ekstrom, and it was found here.
An unlikely candidate inspired Mercedes-Benz’s bionic concept car. At first blush, the boxfish’s design doesn’t seem efficient. However, the boxfish-inspired design has resulted in more fuel-efficient cars. From Daimler:
There is more to the boxfish than meets the eye: despite its angular body, it is an excellent swimmer whose cube-shaped structure is by no means a hindrance. On the contrary, the boxfish possesses unique characteristics and is a prime example of the ingenious inventions developed by nature over millions of years of evolution. The basic principle of this evolution is that nothing is superfluous and each part of the body has a purpose – and sometimes several at once.
. . .
The results are impressive. Despite its angular structure, the boxfish has almost as good streamlining qualities as the water drop shape which specialists consider to be the standard for the ideal aerodynamic form. When exposed to an open flow, this streamlined shape has a Cd value of 0.04. Using computer calculations and wind tunnel tests with an accurate model of the boxfish, the Mercedes engineers achieved a value which came very close to this ideal, namely 0.06 – an outstanding result. It explains why the boxfish is such a good swimmer and is so manoeuvrable with minimal effort.

PHOTO INFORMATION: The boxfish photograph is by Robert Clark, and it was found in a National Geographic article, “Biomimetics: Design by Nature,” by Tom Mueller. The image showing Mercedes-Benz’s bionic boxfish concept car was found here.

Water collecting on a lotus leaf illustrates superhydrophobicity properties, but what is harder to observe with the naked eye is how the lotus leaf stays clean (see the top image). In fact, “in some Eastern cultures, the lotus plant is a symbol of purity.” The second image or computer graphic of the lotus leaf below illustrates the lotus effect or how water droplets collect particles as they move over the lotus’s surface, thus keeping the surface clean. A normal smooth surface will not produce this effect, instead dirt or particles will remain adhered to the surface (think how a white car is easily dirtied). The applications of materials with self-cleaning properties are obvious. From MoreInspiration:
The self-cleaning natural characteristic of the lotus leaf has been mimicked by Sto AG in its painting systems and decorative plasters. StoLotusan contains perfected water-repellent binding agents and fine pigment particles. When a surface is coated with StoLotusan, raindrops automatically bead up and roll off so that the surface, and thus the entire building, stays drier.
A surface coated with this microstructure makes it almost impossible for dirt particles to cling to it; they are simply carried off along with the raindrops rolling down it. This means that the surfaces are not only drier but remain clean longer. And it takes far longer for unattractive discolouration caused by algae, fungi and bacteria to become visible on façades treated with StoLotusan. In addition to StoLotusan Color G wall paint, there is also StoLotusan K decorative plaster.

PHOTO INFORMATION: The water droplets on a lotus leaf was photograph by budak on Flickr. The computer graphic was found here. The top image was found here.
VIDEO: Lotus Effect, nanotechnology, and real-world applications
The flexible photovoltaics below not only capture the sun’s energy, but the flexibility of these photovoltaics permits energy to be collected from motion. The idea is taken from leaves moving in the wind. From the Copenhagen Institute of Interaction Design:
After all, thousands of years of evolution can’t be wrong: if a more efficient design for gathering solar energy lay in developing huge slabs (see most existing solar panels installed on houses these days), trees ought to produce a single huge leaf! However, as trees very elegantly demonstrate, there are multiple forces at work in nature beyond the mandate to collect solar energy.

PHOTO INFORMATION: The image showing the oak leaves is by Dominic’s pics on Flickr. The other images illustrating various photovoltaics engineered to or mimicking tree leaves was found in a blog post—”Solar Biomimicry“—published by Dave Chiu of the Copenhagen Institute of Interaction Design.
The “tubercles on the leading edge of humpback whale flippers” help humpbacks glide through the ocean with greater ease. This idea has been applied to wind power in order to increase efficiency. From NextEnergyNews.com:
In one of the first major studies of this effect, U.S. scientists tested a model of a humpback’s flipper against a smooth flipper found on other whales. They found 32 per cent less drag and an 8 per cent rise in lift from the bumpy model. The bumps help to channel water flow across the flipper, whereas more of the water that hits a smooth flipper is pushed along the flipper’s length to its leading edge, creating more resistance. A Harvard study published last month in the journal Physical Review Letters, and highlighted in the latest Nature, confirmed the aerodynamic effects.


PHOTO INFORMATION: The photograph of a whale’s flipper was found here, and the image showing the tubercle technology (inset) was found here. The top image was found here.
The typical ship’s anchor has been improved and completely changed by using the razor clam as a template, (Ensis directus). From Discovery News:
The RoboClam, as the device is called, digs itself into the ground in two ways, similar to how a razor clam digs.
First, the RoboClam vibrates, changing the relatively solid seabed into a quicksand-like fluid that is easier to dig through. Then the two “shells” of the machine expand, locking the anchor in place, while a worm-like foot pushes down. Once the foot is embedded, the shells contract and the foot pulls the rest of the machine down.
The team is still testing and refining the machine. For now, the RoboClam can push down with about 80 pounds of force, 36 times greater than a razor clam, and dig up to 15 inches deep. The researchers hope the RoboClam will eventually dig twice as far as a razor clam, which can reach depths of more than 28 inches at a rate of about 0.4 inches per second.

PHOTO INFORMATION: The photograph showing the RoboClam (right) and its template, the razor clam (left), is by Donna Coveney, and the image was found here.
VIDEO: A razor clam burrowing into the substrate. Courtesy: MIT
Do you need more research or information on biomimicry? More biomimicry information and projects can be found at these links:
IMAGE: Peter Morris
The humpback whale calf, affectionately named Colin, that tried to suckle from a yacht in waters near Sydney, Australia, is suffering from shark bite wounds and infection. Experts believe it is best to euthanize the calf. From the Sydney Morning Herald:
A spokesman for the service, John Dengate, said the calf, thought to be two- to three-weeks old, would be killed by lethal injection this morning after it was decided it was too dangerous to enter the water after dark.
“They’ll give it an overdose of anaesthetic,” he said last night.
“The last thing we want is that the whale should suffer. The vets are saying ‘he hasn’t got long to go – you should take action’. It was too dangerous to do it last night so we’ll have to relocate it in the morning. It’s not impossible he will have passed away.
“The animal is suffering shark-inflicted injuries, is experiencing breathing difficulties and its flukes are hanging down.”
On television, we’re use to seeing land predators such as lions take down their prey in parts of the world like Africa. However, NOAA officials had a rare opportunity to photograph several tiger sharks (Galeocerdo cuvier) attack a sick humpback whale (Megaptera novaeangliae) calf back in November 2006 off the Kailua-Kona area of Big Island, Hawaii. The scenes are dramatic, because they offer an extraordinary glimpse into the life and death struggle occurring underneath the ocean waves. From NOAA:
They also noted that little could have been done to save the animal. “Shark attacks are part of the natural world in which these animals live,” said Viezbicke. “To them an ailing marine mammal is a meal and what happened was a natural process within the marine world.”
Following the year-old mammal’s death, its carcass was towed and tied to a fish buoy approximately three miles off shore. Officials returned the next day to find the remains gone.
PHOTO CREDIT: KOSTA STAMOULIS, NOAA NMFS PERMIT # 932-1489-08.
Images found here and here. See more Shark Week on The Conservation Report