The Japan Times - Insect compasses, fire-fighting vines: 2023's nature-inspired tech

EUR -
AED 3.820598
AFN 77.661495
ALL 98.909854
AMD 412.515034
ANG 1.875336
AOA 950.210229
ARS 1096.228133
AUD 1.654388
AWG 1.874928
AZN 1.777928
BAM 1.954047
BBD 2.100936
BDT 126.427813
BGN 1.956026
BHD 0.391978
BIF 3042.532299
BMD 1.040182
BND 1.403654
BOB 7.19055
BRL 6.038566
BSD 1.040587
BTN 90.980081
BWP 14.441838
BYN 3.405278
BYR 20387.566856
BZD 2.090125
CAD 1.488838
CDF 2969.719622
CHF 0.937532
CLF 0.026312
CLP 1009.725368
CNY 7.563267
CNH 7.574064
COP 4344.392862
CRC 528.026373
CUC 1.040182
CUP 27.564823
CVE 110.519331
CZK 25.175942
DJF 184.860869
DKK 7.459967
DOP 64.543755
DZD 140.606567
EGP 52.340186
ERN 15.60273
ETB 132.959638
FJD 2.401266
FKP 0.85668
GBP 0.83177
GEL 2.906167
GGP 0.85668
GHS 16.028985
GIP 0.85668
GMD 74.89308
GNF 9002.775012
GTQ 8.044861
GYD 217.694733
HKD 8.099528
HNL 26.51647
HRK 7.676073
HTG 136.109222
HUF 406.221964
IDR 16961.207406
ILS 3.679467
IMP 0.85668
INR 90.843618
IQD 1362.638397
IRR 43791.661707
ISK 146.800855
JEP 0.85668
JMD 164.314194
JOD 0.7379
JPY 158.648039
KES 134.183701
KGS 90.964273
KHR 4181.531467
KMF 491.95355
KPW 936.1639
KRW 1503.832993
KWD 0.320854
KYD 0.86711
KZT 537.879779
LAK 22603.154688
LBP 93148.296628
LKR 310.654337
LRD 204.967949
LSL 19.321369
LTL 3.071387
LVL 0.629195
LYD 5.112529
MAD 10.410921
MDL 19.478248
MGA 4880.622202
MKD 61.530145
MMK 3378.470504
MNT 3534.538488
MOP 8.346813
MRU 41.737293
MUR 48.577847
MVR 16.02896
MWK 1805.755946
MXN 21.403778
MYR 4.600204
MZN 66.478289
NAD 19.321367
NGN 1557.88289
NIO 38.296018
NOK 11.674524
NPR 145.570427
NZD 1.82812
OMR 0.400463
PAB 1.040567
PEN 3.862573
PGK 4.176294
PHP 60.219258
PKR 290.210744
PLN 4.201504
PYG 8198.606643
QAR 3.787817
RON 4.976443
RSD 117.094316
RUB 101.936364
RWF 1447.880408
SAR 3.900849
SBD 8.815735
SCR 14.964251
SDG 625.138829
SEK 11.346279
SGD 1.402597
SHP 0.85668
SLE 23.818865
SLL 21812.095998
SOS 594.463975
SRD 36.515603
STD 21529.666918
SVC 9.104921
SYP 13524.446121
SZL 19.15494
THB 34.908422
TJS 11.357513
TMT 3.651039
TND 3.305635
TOP 2.43621
TRY 37.355983
TTD 7.047678
TWD 34.169664
TZS 2649.893797
UAH 43.309968
UGX 3829.601758
USD 1.040182
UYU 45.27982
UZS 13512.009961
VES 61.77274
VND 26183.980953
VUV 123.492494
WST 2.91337
XAF 655.359708
XAG 0.032145
XAU 0.000363
XCD 2.811144
XDR 0.798092
XOF 655.375445
XPF 119.331742
YER 258.953635
ZAR 19.280319
ZMK 9362.887837
ZMW 29.160843
ZWL 334.938174
  • BCC

    -0.8200

    124.75

    -0.66%

  • SCS

    0.2500

    11.56

    +2.16%

  • RIO

    0.1700

    61.37

    +0.28%

  • JRI

    0.1900

    12.83

    +1.48%

  • BCE

    0.5000

    24.9

    +2.01%

  • RBGPF

    0.2700

    66.27

    +0.41%

  • CMSD

    0.1400

    23.82

    +0.59%

  • NGG

    0.8100

    62.67

    +1.29%

  • CMSC

    0.1600

    23.5

    +0.68%

  • GSK

    2.8600

    37.7

    +7.59%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    7.5

    +1.33%

  • AZN

    1.9750

    70.935

    +2.78%

  • VOD

    0.0700

    8.27

    +0.85%

  • RELX

    0.9100

    50.77

    +1.79%

  • BTI

    0.8700

    41.1

    +2.12%

  • BP

    0.0300

    31.67

    +0.09%

Insect compasses, fire-fighting vines: 2023's nature-inspired tech
Insect compasses, fire-fighting vines: 2023's nature-inspired tech / Photo: MENAHEM KAHANA - AFP

Insect compasses, fire-fighting vines: 2023's nature-inspired tech

Even as human-caused climate change threatens the environment, nature continues to inspire our technological advancement.

Text size:

"The solutions that are provided by nature have evolved for billions of years and tested repeatedly every day since the beginning of time," said Evripidis Gkanias, a University of Edinburgh researcher.

Gkanias has a special interest in how nature can educate artificial intelligence.

"Human creativity might be fascinating, but it cannot reach nature's robustness -- and engineers know that," he told AFP.

From compasses mimicking insect eyes to forest fire-fighting robots that behave like vines, here's a selection of this year's nature-based technology.

- Insect compass -

Some insects -– such as ants and bees -– navigate visually based on the intensity and polarisation of sunlight, thus using the sun's position as a reference point.

Researchers replicated their eye structure to construct a compass capable of estimating the sun's location in the sky, even on cloudy days.

Common compasses rely on Earth's weak magnetic field to navigate, which is easily disturbed by noise from electronics.

A prototype of the light-detecting compass is "already working great", said Gkanias, who led the study published in Communications Engineering.

"With the appropriate funding, this could easily be transformed into a more compact and lightweight product" freely available, he added.

And with a little further tweaking, the insect compass could work on any planet where a big celestial light source is visible.

- Water-collecting webs -

Fabric inspired by the silky threads of a spider web and capable of collecting drinking water from morning mist could soon play an important role in regions suffering water scarcity.

The artificial threads draw from the feather-legged spider, whose intricate "spindle-knots" allow large water droplets to move and collect on its web.

Once the material can be mass produced, the water harvested could reach a "considerable scale for real application", Yongmei Zheng, a co-author of the study published in Advanced Functional Materials, told AFP.

- Fire-fighting vines -

Animals aren't the only source of inspiration from nature.

Scientists have created an inflatable robot that "grows" in the direction of light or heat, in the same way vines creep up a wall or across a forest floor.

The roughly two-metre-long tubular robot can steer itself using fluid-filled pouches rather than costly electronics.

In time, these robots could find hot spots and deliver fire suppression agents, say researchers at the University of California, Santa Barbara.

"These robots are slow, but that is OK for fighting smouldering fires, such as peat fires, which can be a major source of carbon emissions," co-author Charles Xiao told AFP.

But before the robots can climb the terrain, they need to be more heat-resistant and agile.

- Kombucha circuits -

Scientists at the Unconventional Computing Laboratory at the University of the West of England in Bristol have found a way to use slimy kombucha mats –- produced by yeast and bacteria during the fermenting of the popular tea-based drink -- to create "kombucha electronics".

The scientists printed electrical circuits onto dried mats that were capable of illuminating small LED lights.

Dry kombucha mats share properties of textiles or even leather. But they are sustainable and biodegradable, and can even be immersed in water for days without being destroyed, said the authors.

"Kombucha wearables could potentially incorporate sensors and electronics within the material itself, providing a seamless and unobtrusive integration of technology with the human body," such as for heart monitors or step-trackers, lead author Andrew Adamatzky and the laboratory's director, told AFP.

The mats are lighter, cheaper and more flexible than plastic, but the authors caution that durability and mass production remain significant obstacles.

- Scaly robots -

Pangolins resemble a cross between a pine cone and an anteater. The soft-bodied mammals, covered in reptilian scales, are known to curl up in a ball to protect themselves against predators.

Now, a tiny robot might adapt that same design for potentially life-saving work, according to a study published in Nature Communications.

It is intended to roll through our digestive tracts before unfurling and delivering medicine or stopping internal bleeding in hard-to-reach parts of the human body.

Lead author Ren Hao Soon of the Max Planck Institute for Intelligent Systems was watching a YouTube video when he "stumbled across the animal and saw it was a good fit".

Soon needed a soft material that wouldn't cause harm inside the human body, with the advantages of a hard material that could, for example, conduct electricity. The Pangolin's unique structure was perfect.

The tiny robots are still in their initial stages, but they could be made for as little as 10 euros each.

"Looking to nature to solve these kinds of problems is natural," said Soon.

"Every single design part of an animal serves a particular function. It’s very elegant."

K.Okada--JT