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1.
Bioinspir Biomim ; 18(1)2022 12 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36582181

ABSTRACT

The development of enhanced processes for filtration is one solution for stopping the increasing freshwater and sea pollution caused by microplastic and microfibers. Major contributors to micro-X pollution are domestic devices such as washing machines, which also hold a high technical potential for separating problematic soils from waste water during cleaning cycles. The focus of the present paper are the biomimetic development of a novel concept for filtration and removal of particles such as microfibers in conventional washing machines. To this goal, a TRIZ analysis yielded viable solutions for the major key issues. In a next step, measurements were made with various filters with and without ribbed structures. The results are promising for the incorporation in a filter concept that is easy to operate and cost-effective.


Subject(s)
Plastics , Textiles , Wastewater , Fresh Water , Filtration
2.
J R Soc Interface ; 19(188): 20220068, 2022 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35317649

ABSTRACT

The ectoparasitic lifestyle of the Mediterranean medicinal leech (Hirudo verbana) requires reliable functioning of its attachment organs (i.e. anterior and posterior suction discs) on multiple habitat- and host-specific surfaces under both normal and shear stresses. In addition to some intrinsic properties of the attachment devices, however, only a few extrinsic factors (e.g. substrate roughness and porosity) have been considered in previous studies on leech suckers. Using centrifugal force experiments, we analysed the attachment performance of H. verbana under different types of loading on artificial substrates differing in porosity and their mechanical properties. Whereas the substrate porosity significantly influenced leech attachment under normal and shear loading, the different mechanical properties did not noticeably affect attachment within the considered parameter limits. Furthermore, suction was confirmed to be the primary attachment mechanism independent of the prevailing loading condition. The question of whether the suction cups of H. verbana are adapted to a specific loading condition could not be answered. In any case, our results again highlight the high functional resilience of leech suckers guaranteeing a successful ectoparasitic lifestyle.


Subject(s)
Hirudo medicinalis , Leeches , Animals , Porosity
3.
Int J Mol Sci ; 21(16)2020 Aug 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32796721

ABSTRACT

Within the Aizoaceae, the genus Delosperma exhibits a vast diversification colonizing various ecological niches in South-Africa and showing evolutionary adaptations to dry habitats that might include rapid self-sealing. Leaves of Delosperma react to external damage by the bending or contraction of the entire leaf until wound edges are brought into contact. A study of leaf morphology and anatomy, biomechanics of entire leaves and individual tissues and self-sealing kinematics after a ring incision under low and high relative humidity (RH) was carried out comparing the closely related species Delosperma cooperi and Delosperma ecklonis, which are indigenous to semi-arid highlands and regions with an oceanic climate, respectively. For both species, the absolute contractions of the examined leaf segments ("apex", "incision", "base") were more pronounced at low RH levels. Independent of the given RH level, the absolute contractions within the incision region of D. cooperi were significantly higher than in all other segments of this species and of D. ecklonis. The more pronounced contraction of D. cooperi leaves was linked mainly to the elastic properties of the central vascular strand, which is approximately twice as flexible as that of D. ecklonis leaves.


Subject(s)
Aizoaceae/physiology , Plant Leaves/physiology , Aizoaceae/anatomy & histology , Aizoaceae/ultrastructure , Biomechanical Phenomena , Elastic Modulus , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Plant Epidermis/anatomy & histology , Plant Epidermis/ultrastructure , Plant Leaves/anatomy & histology , Plant Leaves/ultrastructure , Species Specificity , Tensile Strength
4.
J R Soc Interface ; 17(168): 20200300, 2020 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32673516

ABSTRACT

Haematophagous ectoparasites must ensure a reliable hold to their host during blood meals and, therefore, have evolved a broad spectrum of versatile and effective attachment mechanisms. The Mediterranean medicinal leech (Hirudo verbana), for example, uses suction on both smooth and textured air-tight substrates. However, preliminary studies showed that H. verbana is also capable of attaching itself to air-permeable substrates, where suction does not work. Using high-speed videography and mechanical tests, we comparatively investigated the attachment of H. verbana on both smooth and textured air-tight as well as on porous artificial substrates, also considering the influence of mucus on sucker surfaces. In general, the leech-specific locomotion cycle did not differ between the tested surfaces, and the leeches were able to reliably attach to both air-tight and porous substrates. From our results, we conclude that suction is presumably the primary attachment mechanism of H. verbana. However, secondary mechanisms such as mechanical interlocking with surface asperities and pores or capillary forces occurring at the interface between the mucus-covered suckers and the substratum are also employed. In any case, the rich repertoire of applicable attachment principles renders the organs of H. verbana functionally highly resilient.


Subject(s)
Hirudo medicinalis , Leeches , Animals , Feeding Behavior , Locomotion , Porosity
5.
Biol Lett ; 15(9): 20190254, 2019 09 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31551064

ABSTRACT

Gerbera, one of the most loved cut flowers, is (in)famous for the drooping of its flower heads under dehydration. This effect has been quantified by analysing both fully turgescent and wilting peduncles of Gerbera jamesonii 'Nuance'. Wilting peduncles display pronounced bending in the region directly below the inflorescence after 24 h of dehydration, while the rest of the peduncle remains upright. Using anatomical measurements and three-point bending tests, we have analysed whether this phenomenon is caused by mechanical and/or geometrical alterations. We have found that both the flexural rigidity and the axial second moment of area are significantly decreased in the apical part of wilting peduncles, whereas the bending elastic modulus shows no significant change. Moreover, cross-sections of wilting peduncles ovalize significantly more than those of turgescent peduncles and exhibit considerable shrinkage of the parenchyma, taking up the majority of the cross-sectional area. Generally, the drooping of wilting Gerbera flowers can be regarded as a temporary instability of a rod-shaped cellular solid caused by anatomical differences (tissue arrangement, existence or the absence of a pith cavity) and geometrical changes (the decrease of axial second moment of area, cross-sectional ovalization, shrinkage of tissues) between the apical and basal regions of their peduncles.


Subject(s)
Asteraceae , Inflorescence , Flowers
6.
Front Plant Sci ; 9: 1701, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30515187

ABSTRACT

Resurrection plants have fascinated scientists since centuries as they can fully recover from cellular water contents below 10%, concomitantly showing remarkable leaf folding motions. While physiological adaptations have been meticulously investigated, the understanding of structural and mechanical adaptations of this phenomenon is scarce. Using imaging and bending techniques during dehydration-rehydration experiments, morphological, anatomical, and biomechanical properties of desiccation-tolerant Ramonda myconi are examined, and selected structural adaptations are compared to those of homoiohydrous Monophyllaea horsfieldii (both Gesneriaceae). At low water availability, intact and cut-off R. myconi leaves undergo considerable morphological alterations, which are fully and repeatedly reversible upon rehydration. Furthermore, their petioles show a triphasic mechanical behavior having a turgor-based structural stability at high (Phase 1), a flexible mechanically state at intermediate (Phase 2) and a material-based stability at low water contents (Phase 3). Lastly, manipulation experiments with cut-off plant parts revealed that both the shape alterations of individual structures, as well as, the general leaf kinematics largely rely on passive swelling and shrinking processes. Taken together, R. myconi possesses structural and mechanical adaptations to desiccation (in addition to physiological adaptations), which may mainly be passively driven by its water status influenced by the water fluctuations in its surroundings.

7.
J Theor Biol ; 458: 184-206, 2018 12 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30149008

ABSTRACT

A numerical computer model was developed in order to describe the complex self-sealing mechanism of injured Delosperma cooperi leaves. For this purpose, the leaf anatomy was simplified to a model consisting of five concentric tissue layers. Specific parameters (modulus of elasticity, permeability, porosity, etc.) were assigned to each tissue type for modelling its physical properties. These parameters were either determined experimentally from living plant material or taken from literature. The developed computer model considers the leaf as a liquid-filled porous body within a continuum approach in order to determine the governing equations. The modelling of the wound accounts for both the injury of peripheral tissues and the free surfaces caused by the incision. The loss of water through these free surfaces initiates the self-sealing process. It is further shown that the tissue permeability and the reflection coefficient (relative permeability of a cell membrane for solutes) are the determining parameters of the self-sealing process, whereas the modulus of elasticity has a negligible influence. Thus, the self-sealing mechanism is a hydraulically driven process which leads to a local (incision region) and global (total leaf) contraction of the leaf. The accuracy of the modelled self-sealing process was validated by comparing simulation results with experiments conducted on natural plant leaves. The results will serve as valuable input for developing novel, bio-inspired technical products with self-sealing function.


Subject(s)
Aizoaceae/metabolism , Models, Biological , Plant Leaves/metabolism , Aizoaceae/cytology , Finite Element Analysis , Plant Leaves/cytology
8.
Beilstein J Nanotechnol ; 9: 175-186, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29441263

ABSTRACT

During evolution, plants evolved various reactions to wounding. Fast wound sealing and subsequent healing represent a selective advantage of particular importance for plants growing in arid habitats. An effective self-sealing function by internal deformation has been found in the succulent leaves of Delosperma cooperi. After a transversal incision, the entire leaf bends until the wound is closed. Our results indicate that the underlying sealing principle is a combination of hydraulic shrinking and swelling as the main driving forces and growth-induced mechanical pre-stresses in the tissues. Hydraulic effects were measured in terms of the relative bending angle over 55 minutes under various humidity conditions. The higher the relative air humidity, the lower the bending angle. Negative bending angles were found when a droplet of liquid water was applied to the wound. The statistical analysis revealed highly significant differences of the single main effects such as "humidity conditions in the wound region" and "time after wounding" and their interaction effect. The centripetal arrangement of five tissue layers with various thicknesses and significantly different mechanical properties might play an additional role with regard to mechanically driven effects. Injury disturbs the mechanical equilibrium, with pre-stresses leading to internal deformation until a new equilibrium is reached. In the context of self-sealing by internal deformation, the highly flexible wide-band tracheids, which form a net of vascular bundles, are regarded as paedomorphic tracheids, which are specialised to prevent cell collapse under drought stress and allow for building growth-induced mechanical pre-stresses.

9.
R Soc Open Sci ; 5(1): 171076, 2018 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29410820

ABSTRACT

In its natural habitat, the one-leaf plant Monophyllaea horsfieldii (Gesneriaceae) shows striking postural changes and dramatic loss of stability in response to intermittently occurring droughts. As the morphological, anatomical and biomechanical bases of these alterations are as yet unclear, we examined the influence of varying water contents on M. horsfieldii by conducting dehydration-rehydration experiments together with various imaging techniques as well as quantitative bending and turgor pressure measurements. As long as only moderate water stress was applied, gradual reductions in hypocotyl diameters and structural bending moduli during dehydration were almost always rapidly recovered in acropetal direction upon rehydration. On an anatomical scale, M. horsfieldii hypocotyls revealed substantial water stress-induced alterations in parenchymatous tissues, whereas the cell form and structure of epidermal and vascular tissues hardly changed. In summary, the functional morphology and biomechanics of M. horsfieldii hypocotyls directly correlated with water status alterations and associated physiological parameters (i.e. turgor pressure). Moreover, M. horsfieldii showed only little passive structural-functional adaptations to dehydration in comparison with poikilohydrous Ramonda myconi.

10.
Beilstein J Nanotechnol ; 7: 664-74, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27335756

ABSTRACT

Although the Venus flytrap (Dionaea muscipula) can be considered as one of the most extensively investigated carnivorous plants, knowledge is still scarce about diversity of the snap-trap motion, the functionality of snap traps under varying environmental conditions, and their opening motion. By conducting simple snap-trap closure experiments in air and under water, we present striking evidence that adult Dionaea snaps similarly fast in aerial and submersed states and, hence, is potentially able to gain nutrients from fast aquatic prey during seasonal inundation. We reveal three snapping modes of adult traps, all incorporating snap buckling, and show that millimeter-sized, much slower seedling traps do not yet incorporate such elastic instabilities. Moreover, opening kinematics of young and adult Dionaea snap traps reveal that reverse snap buckling is not performed, corroborating the assumption that growth takes place on certain trap lobe regions. Our findings are discussed in an evolutionary, biomechanical, functional-morphological and biomimetic context.

11.
J R Soc Interface ; 13(117)2016 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27075001

ABSTRACT

Medicinal leeches use their suction discs for locomotion, adhesion to the host and, in the case of the anterior disc, also for blood ingestion. The biomechanics of their suction-based adhesion systems has been little understood until now. We investigated the functional morphology of the anterior and posterior suckers ofH irudo verbena by using light and scanning electron microscopy. Furthermore, we analysed the adhesion qualitatively and quantitatively by conducting behavioural and mechanical experiments. Our high-speed video analyses provide new insights into the attachment and detachment processes and we present a detailed description of the leech locomotion cycle. Pull-off force measurements of the anterior and posterior suction organs on seven different substrates under both aerial and water-submersed conditions reveal a significant influence of the surrounding medium, the substrate surface roughness and the tested organ on attachment forces and tenacities.


Subject(s)
Animal Structures/anatomy & histology , Animal Structures/physiology , Feeding Behavior/physiology , Leeches/anatomy & histology , Leeches/physiology , Locomotion/physiology , Animals
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