Biological materials of marine origin: Vertebrates
Ehrlich, H. (2015). Biological materials of marine origin: Vertebrates. Biologically-Inspired Systems, 4. Springer: Dordrecht. ISBN 978-94-007-5729-5; e-ISBN 978-94-007-5730-1. xii, 435 pp. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-5730-1
Part of: Biologically-Inspired Systems. Springer: Berlin. ISSN 2211-0593; e-ISSN 2211-0607, more
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Available in | Author |
VLIZ: Invertebrate Biology INV.43 [103436]
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Keywords |
Biomimetics Biomineralization Vertebrates Marine/Coastal |
Abstract |
This work is a source of modern knowledge on biomineralization, biomimetics and materials science with respect to marine vertebrates. For the first time in scientific literature the author gives the most coherent analysis of the nature, origin and evolution of biocomposites and biopolymers isolated from and observed in the broad variety of marine vertebrate organisms (fish, reptilian, birds and mammals) and within their hierarchically organized structural formations. The basic format is that of a major review article, with liberal use of references to original literature. There is a wealth of new and newly synthesized information, including dozens of previously unpublished images of unique marine creatures including extinct, extant and living taxa and their mineralized and un-mineralized structures from nano- to micro – and macroscale. The material is organized effectively along both biological (phyla) and functional lines. Several modern topics e.g. “Biohalite”, or “Fish Skin: From Clothing to Tissue Engineering”, as well as “Silica-based Minerals in Marine Vertebrates”, are never represented and discussed in previously published books. For the first time such current concepts as hierarchical organization of biocomposites and skeletal structures, structural bioscaffolds, biomimetism and bioinspiration as tools for the design of innovative materials are critically analyzed from both biological and materials science point of view using numerous unique examples of marine vertebrate origin. This monograph reviews the most relevant advances in the marine biological materials research field, pointing out several approaches being introduced and explored by distinct modern laboratories. |
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