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This book surveys attachment structures and adhesive secretions
occurring in this class of animals and discusses the relationships
between structure, properties, and function in the context of
evolutionary trends, and biomimetic potential. Topics comprise
mechanical attachment devices, such as clamps, claws, hooks, spines
and wraps, as well as hairy and smooth adhesive pads, nano-fibrils,
suction cups, and viscid and solidifying adhesives. Attachment is
one of the major types of interactions between an organism and its
environment. There are numerous studies that deal with this
phenomenon in lizards, frogs, insects, barnacles, mussels and
echinoderms, but the second largest class of animals, the
Arachnida, was highly neglected so far. The authors demonstrated
that most arachnid adhesive structures are highly analogous to
those of insects and vertebrates, but there are also numerous
unique developments with some intriguing working principles.
Because arachnid attachment organs have a very strong potential of
technological ideas for the development of new materials and
systems, inspirations from biology could also be interesting for a
broad range of topics in materials and surface engineering.
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