Innovation inspired by nature — Janine Benyus on how life's 3.8 billion years of R&D can teach us to feed, power, build, heal, compute, and do business, restructured as a complete visual reference.
Janine M. Benyus · 19978 CHAPTERS9 LAWS OF NATURENature as model · measure · mentor
Echoing Nature · The Manifesto
Section 01
The Biomimicry Revolution
Benyus names a quiet revolution: biomimicry — "the conscious emulation of life's genius. Innovation inspired by nature." After 3.8 billion years of research and development, "failures are fossils, and what surrounds us is the secret to survival." Unlike the Industrial Revolution, this one is based "not on what we can extract from nature, but on what we can learn from her."
Nature as Model · Measure · Mentor
"Once we see nature as a mentor, our relationship with the living world changes. Gratitude tempers greed, and… the notion of resources becomes obscene." The biomimics work "at the edges of their disciplines," where ecology meets agriculture, medicine, materials, energy, computing, and commerce — knowing "there is more to discover than to invent."
The Arc of Revolutions
Each revolution drove us to "gain our independence" from nature — until "we haven't escaped the gravity of life at all." Reaching our limits, "if we choose to admit them," may be the chance "to leap to a new phase of coping, in which we adapt to the Earth rather than the other way around."
Structure
Bested already
"Our most clever architectural struts and beams are already featured in lily pads and bamboo stems." Our best radar "is hard of hearing compared to the bat's multifrequency transmission."
Climate control
Bested already
"Our central heating and air-conditioning are bested by the termite tower's steady 86 degrees F." The polar bear's transparent hollow hairs blanket its skin "like the panes of a greenhouse."
Feats we only dream of
Bested already
Bioluminescent algae make light with no heat; arctic frogs freeze solid and revive; hummingbirds cross the Gulf of Mexico "on less than one tenth of an ounce of fuel." Even the wheel exists — in the bacterial flagellum's rotary motor.
The cautionary tale"The last really famous biomimetic invention was the airplane" — the Wright brothers watched vultures. "We flew like a bird for the first time in 1903, and by 1914, we were dropping bombs from the sky." Benyus warns it may take not a change in technology but "a change of heart, a humbling that allows us to be attentive to nature's lessons." We are "one vote in a parliament of 30 million… a species among species," not the apex of the pyramid.
"After 3.8 billion years of research and development, failures are fossils, and what surrounds us is the secret to survival."
Chapter 1 · Echoing Nature
The Canon
Section 02
Nature's Nine Laws
After "decades of faithful study," ecologists began "to divine a canon of nature's laws, strategies, and principles that resonates in every chapter of this book." These nine are the operating instructions of the living world — the standard against which every biomimetic design is measured. Life "does everything we want to do, without guzzling fossil fuel, polluting the planet, or mortgaging their future."
Nature's Operating System · The Nine Laws at a Glance
The nine laws cluster into four movements — how life powers itself, how it builds, how it lives together, and how it stays in place. Together they are less a checklist than a single, self-consistent way of being — "the operating instructions" any design must pass to earn a place on Earth.
1
Nature runs on sunlightcurrent solar income, not ancient buried carbon
2
Nature uses only the energy it needsefficiency, not excess
3
Nature fits form to functionevery shape earns its keep
4
Nature recycles everythingwaste from one process is food for another
Nature banks on diversitymany species, many varieties, resilience
7
Nature demands local expertisetuned through evolution to place
8
Nature curbs excesses from withinself-regulation, feedback, balance
9
Nature taps the power of limitsconstraint as a source of creativity
The hardest law · the power of limitsThis "is perhaps most opaque to us because we humans regard limits as a universal dare, something to be overcome so we can continue our expansion." Other Earthlings "take their limits more seriously." Within tight bounds, "life unfurls her colors with virtuosity, using limits as a source of power, a focusing mechanism. Because nature spins her spell in such a small space, her creations read like a poem that says only what it means."
Dynamic steady stateThese laws don't describe a static world. "In ensemble, living things maintain a dynamic stability, like dancers in an arabesque, continually juggling resources without waste." It is "not the fact that nothing changes… but that the changes are never catastrophic." The living world is humbling: "all our inventions have already appeared in nature in a more elegant form and at a lot less cost to the planet."
"Studying these poems day in and day out, biomimics develop a high degree of awe, bordering on reverence."
Chapter 1 · Echoing Nature
Chapter 2 · How Will We Feed Ourselves?
Section 03 · Farming to Fit the Land
Farming Like a Prairie
"Essentially, we have to farm the way nature farms." Till agriculture of annuals is a 10,000-year "treadmill of vigilance" that destroys the one thing it can't replace — topsoil. At The Land Institute in Salina, Kansas, Wes Jackson takes "wilderness as its model, nature as its measure," asking what agriculture would look like if it imitated the tallgrass prairie: a self-fertilizing, self-weeding, pest-resistant perennial polyculture.
Monoculture vs. Prairie — What Lies Beneath
70% of a prairie's living weight is belowground — "a single big bluestem will have twenty-five miles of fibrous plumbing." 99.9% of prairie plants are perennials: they hold soil, self-fertilize (roots die & decay), and self-weed (they leaf out before weeds can rise). The prairie "runs on sun and rain, year after year, with no one to cultivate the soil or plant the seeds."
The Parable of the Prairie
The four "suits" and the power of diversity
Ecologist Jon Piper found that every prairie repeats a pattern of four classic plant types — warm-season grasses, cool-season grasses, legumes (nitrogen-fixers), and composites. Diversity (231 species on one Kansas knob) is "the cheapest and best form of pest control": pests that specialize on one host "have a harder time finding their target," so "attacks die down before they become epidemics." Different species excel in different years, so the community endures drought and deluge alike.
The Holy Grail · Perennial Grains
Filling the blank in the chart
When Wes Jackson mapped every crop by type, one box stood glaringly empty: the herbaceous, seed-yielding perennial. Conventional wisdom said perennials couldn't yield abundant seed. The Land Institute proved otherwise — breeding candidates like eastern gamagrass, Illinois bundleflower, and Maximilian sunflower toward crops that are "dependable, but not dependent on us." The real goal is polyculture, because "only polycultures are able to pay their own bills."
Order for freeThere is "a sweet spot between chaos and order, gas and crystal, wild and tame" — the zone of self-organization that complexity researcher Stuart Kauffman calls "order for free." As tropical agroecologist Jack Ewel puts it: "Imitate the vegetative structure of an ecosystem, and you will be granted function." (See Pimm & Drake's "Humpty Dumpty hypothesis": a prairie can't be reassembled instantly — it needs a successional history to shake down.)
"Threading our needle with the roots of such a stable system, we would sew up one of the deepest wounds on the planet — the gash made by till agriculture."
Chapter 2 · Farming to Fit the Land
Chapter 3 · How Will We Harness Energy?
Section 04 · Light Into Life
Gathering Energy Like a Leaf
"The sun's fusion of hydrogen provides enough light energy to easily supply all our energy needs without burning a drop of oil. If only we had a way to plug in." Photosynthesis is "the world's most massive chemical operation" — 300 billion tons of sugar a year — and some purple bacteria capture light with 95% efficiency, four times the best solar cell. At Arizona State, a team of chemists is building an artificial version from scratch.
Electron Pinball · How a Leaf Stores the Sun
Sunlight excites an electron on the chlorophyll pair; nearby "acceptor" molecules snatch it away and pass it along "like a hot potato," leaving a positive charge on one side of the membrane and a negative on the other. As biochemist Tom Moore says, "membrane potential equals chemical and electrical potential equals life." That stored charge splits water, frees oxygen, and turns CO₂ into sugar.
The Race at Arizona State
From dyad to triad — holding the charge apart
Devens Gust, Tom Moore, Ana Moore, and Neal Woodbury don't try to copy the ten-thousand-atom reaction center — "Nature has a three-billion-year jump on us here." They model "only its essence." Earlier dyads (two-part molecules) separated charge for only a picosecond before it recombined in wasted heat. Their breakthrough was the triad — a donor-donor-acceptor string that puts physical distance between the plus and minus, holding them apart "long enough for us to accomplish work."
The dream: chemistry in sunlightA molecular solar battery could hook to wires for current, split water for clean hydrogen, or "drive solar-based manufacturing." As Moore imagines it: "Instead of boiling chemicals for several hours in toxic solutions to make plastics, you could build a tiny reaction vessel, give it a power pack, and stand back so you're not blocking its sun." What is science fiction for us "is commonplace for plants."
The Rival Approach · Grätzel
The cell that runs on dye, not silicon
While Arizona builds the reaction center molecule by molecule, Switzerland's Michael Grätzel took the leaf's other lesson — its antenna. His dye-sensitized solar cell abandons expensive, high-purity silicon for a cheap sandwich: titanium-dioxide grains (the white in toothpaste and paint) coated in a light-catching ruthenium dye that plays chlorophyll's role, bathed in an electrolyte. Photons knock electrons off the dye; the titania whisks them into a circuit. It's crude next to a leaf, but it can be printed onto flexible sheets, works in dim and slanted light, and costs a fraction of a silicon panel — "photosynthesis without the plant."
The hydrogen prizeThe deepest dream is to split water the way the leaf does — using sunlight to prise hydrogen from H₂O, then burning that hydrogen (back into water) for clean, storable, carbon-free fuel. "The only exhaust is water vapor." A cheap artificial photosystem that runs the water-splitting reaction would let us "grow" fuel from sun and rain, closing the loop that fossil fuels rip open. The leaf has done it, silently, on every pond and pasture, for three billion years.
The envy"Every morning, as our technicians don their white suits and static-free moonboots to assemble high-tech solar cells in toxin-laden factories, the leaves and fronds and blades outside their windows are silently assembling themselves by the trillions." We burn "the heirlooms made from ancient sunlight, ignoring the fact that contemporary sunlight was streaming in every window."
Chapter 4 · How Will We Make Things?
Section 05 · Fitting Form to Function
Weaving Fibers Like a Spider
Our industrial motto is "heat, beat, and treat" — high temperatures, high pressures, harsh chemicals. Nature can't afford that: "Life can't put its factory on the edge of town; it has to live where it works." Out of common chemicals — carbon, calcium, water — organisms craft materials we can only envy. Abalone shell is twice as tough as our best ceramics; spider silk, ounce for ounce, is five times stronger than steel.
Abalone Nacre · Brick-and-Mortar Toughness
Counterintuitively, the abalone builds the polymer "rooms" first, then lets ions crystallize inside — "the templated becomes the template." Mehmet Sarikaya (Univ. of Washington): "Abalone is twice as tough as any ceramic we know of — instead of breaking like a man-made ceramic, the shell deforms under stress and behaves like a metal."
Trick 1
Life-friendly processes
Materials made "in water, at room temperature, without harsh chemicals or high pressures" — the opposite of heat, beat, and treat.
Trick 2
Ordered hierarchy
Precision built in "from the atomic level all the way to the macroscopic" — like a tendon's twisted bundles of twisted bundles. "Structure granting function."
Trick 3
Self-assembly
Not carved from the top down but grown from the ground up. Molecules that fit "snap together as they relax" — energetically downhill. "It's order for free."
Trick 4
Templating with proteins
Proteins studded with charged landing sites direct exactly where and how crystals form — "no waste on the cutting-room floor."
The Soft Stuff · Spider Silk
Steel from flies and water
If nacre is nature's ceramic, dragline silk is its miracle fiber — "ounce for ounce, five times stronger than steel," and far tougher, able to stretch and absorb the shock of a flying insect without snapping. The spider spins it at body temperature, in water, from digested flies — no high heat, no sulfuric-acid baths, no petroleum feedstock. Where DuPont makes Kevlar by "boiling petroleum-derived molecules in concentrated sulfuric acid," the spider "manages this feat" with the two of nature's ingredients always on hand. To copy the fiber, biomimics must first copy the process: how the liquid protein "dope" is drawn and aligned into a solid, insoluble thread as it leaves the body. Master that, and we make our strongest materials "the way animals and plants do."
The Glue That Sets Underwater
Mussel byssus → Cell-Tak
A mussel clamps to a wave-battered rock with threads it cures in cold salt water — the one feat our epoxies can't manage. Herbert Waite decoded its adhesive proteins (rich in the amino acid DOPA); a firm bottled the trick as Cell-Tak, a glue that makes living cells stick to lab dishes. The holy grail beyond it: a nontoxic surgical adhesive that could replace stitches and staples, bonding wet tissue inside the body.
Growing, Not Carving
Fabbers & free-form fabrication
Life never machines a part from a block — it grows it, laying material only where needed. "Fabbers" (rapid-prototypers) inch us toward that: instead of milling away 90% of a billet as scrap, they build an object layer by additive layer from a digital model. It is the first stir of a manufacturing that, like a shell or a bone, adds instead of subtracts.
The materials revolutionMehmet Sarikaya: "We are on the brink of a materials revolution that will be on a par with the Iron Age and the Industrial Revolution… biomimetics will significantly alter the way in which we live." The prize: coatings, ceramics, and composites grown by dipping an object in protein and seawater — a "living-room window as rigid as glass, yet able to bend and bounce back when assaulted by your neighbor kid's baseball."
Benyus's honest tensionProducing these proteins at scale often means splicing genes into E. coli. Benyus voices her discomfort plainly: "I can't shake the feeling that it is the height of hubris for us to cross that interphylum line." She holds "my real fear about genetic engineering" against "my real desire for us to find more benign ways of manufacturing" — a dilemma she refuses to resolve too neatly.
Chapter 5 · How Will We Heal Ourselves?
Section 06 · Experts in Our Midst
Finding Cures Like a Chimp
There are over 400,000 plants and as many unexplored chemicals, and we screen them the slow way — collect it all, sort it out. But animals have been "native to this place" for millions of years and already know "what to eat and what to avoid, what will make them sick… or arrest a case of diarrhea." They are "the experts we have been too arrogant to consult." The emerging field: zoopharmacognosy.
The Wild Pharmacist
The chimp CHS, ill and lethargic, "staggered off into the jungle" straight to a Vernonia amygdalina shrub she'd never normally eat — chewing the bitter pith for its antiparasitic compounds. Within 24 hours she was well. The Tongwe people use the same plant, at the same dose. "Animals can use those compounds to their own benefit, often turning the toxic effects against their own internal enemies." (Richard Wrangham)
Nature's Chemical Warfare
Why a plant is a minefield — and a medicine chest
A plant, "rooted in place, unable to switch your tail," fights back with chemistry — the "secondary compounds" that "give the green world its flavors, fragrances, spices, medicines, and poisons": alkaloids, tannins, glycosides, terpenoids. A wild herbivore must thread this minefield, netting more nutrients than toxins. Three strategies emerge: the specialist (koala, one plant), the generalist (small amounts of many), and the picky eater (our primate ancestors, choicest parts only).
Chemically astute eatingKenneth Glander's lemurs, given ten unfamiliar leaves, "spit out the bad and swallowed the good… We couldn't have hired a nutritionist to do a better job." Howler monkeys eat one tree and ignore its identical neighbor — because poorer soil made the neighbor "beef up with toxins." Even geophagy (dirt-eating), Bernadette Marriott found, is a rhesus monkey's mineral supplement: "At least they don't have to pay sixteen dollars a bottle."
Medicinal Eating
Animals as their own pharmacists
The evidence has jelled into a field. Baboons above and below Ethiopia's Awash Falls have equal access to a plant (Balanites, containing an anti-fluke compound) — but only the population living with the parasite-carrying snails eats it. Howler monkeys with fig trees carry light worm loads; those without carry heavy ones. Blue jays "ant" — rubbing formic acid into their feathers to delouse. Bears roll in Ligusticum, the very "bear medicine" the Navajo say the bears taught them. And Karen Strier's muriquis practice "reproductive eating" — switching to low-tannin, estrogen-rich leaves around mating season. "You are what you eat," says Glander — "but I suggest that we may be what our mother eats."
What nature has already prescribedOnce, plants gave us 40% of all prescription medicines: Taxol (Pacific yew → ovarian & breast cancer), diosgenin (wild yam → the first contraceptive pill), vincristine (Madagascar periwinkle → childhood leukemia), digitalis (foxglove → heart failure), reserpine (Rauwolfia → blood pressure). We forgot them for synthetic chemistry — then the synthetic well ran dry ("the emerging age of viruses," resistant TB, a stillborn malaria drug), and the drug companies rushed back outdoors.
Narrowing the Search
From dragnet to ethnobotany to biorational discovery
Finding a cure is "a needle-in-a-haystack" — one drug per 12,000 samples — and we're out of time (one in four species may face extinction by 2025). So the search narrows: from indiscriminate collecting, to the phylogenetic strategy, to finally, humbly, consulting shamans. Legendary ethnobotanist Richard Evans Schultes found Amazon healers can tell apart "chemivars" that look identical to Western botanists. "74% of plant-derived drugs came to attention because of their use in traditional medicine" — yet we lost 90 of 270 Indian cultures in a century, "and with them, all their knowledge." Beyond that lies biorational discovery (Dan Janzen, Tom Eisner): read the whole ecosystem — an undamaged plant hides "potent defenses"; the tireless-immunity of a dogfish shark yields the antibiotic squalamine; a frog's clean wounds yield the magainins (Hebrew for "shield").
Swallowing our hubrisNot everyone welcomed the idea of animal wisdom. Stanford's Robert Sapolsky dismissed "eating episodes" as mere anecdote. The zoopharmacognosists' reply became a rallying cry for biomimics everywhere: "Even if this endeavor doesn't show us new drugs, we think it worthwhile merely because there's a range of animal skills waiting to be discovered… In an era of shrinking biological resources, we don't think it's such a good idea to rely only on studies of laboratory rats. Let's keep an open mind about ways to explore the natural world."
A race and a rescueThe lesson doubles as urgency. As the Green Revolution "converted whole nations" off native, hardy crops, and as species vanish, the window to "consult the talented taste buds of wild connoisseurs" is closing. Benyus urges us "not to give up on their wisdom" — the animals and indigenous peoples who have already forged "a clear path through the chemical jungle." By accepting their expertise, "we may be retrieving the lost thread to a world we once knew well."
Chapter 6 · How Will We Store What We Learn?
Section 07 · Dances With Molecules
Computing Like a Cell
In "the vast space of all possible computing styles," our engineers climbed one mountain — digital silicon, zeros and ones in a line. Nature scaled a different range entirely. Michael Conrad (Wayne State) pursues jigsaw computing: molecules that fit together by shape and touch, "literally falling to a solution." Pointing at his antique Mac, he says: "This is the deadest thing in the universe." Life "computes by feeling its way to a solution."
The von Neumann Bottleneck vs. the Wisdom of the Net
Our computers funnel every task through a single "von Neumann bottleneck," so "most of them are dormant at any given time." The brain has no central command — "the wisdom of the net presides," a meshwork where every neuron is "a full-fledged chemical computer." A few cells dying "won't sink the whole system," and every newcomer makes the whole stronger. That is why a brain can learn.
Shape-Based Computing
Life computes by touch, not by number-crunching
Conrad drops a pencil: "This is how nature computes." Molecules "jigsaw together, literally falling to a solution" — minimizing their free energy, snapping together "like people falling asleep and finally rolling toward the sag in the bed." This lock-and-key logic runs "hormone-receptor hookups, antigen-antibody matchups, genetic information transfer, and cell differentiation." An embryo the size of a period follows its whole recipe this way. "Life doesn't number-crunch; life computes by feeling its way to a solution."
Why carbon, not siliconTo feel your way by shape "you have to use molecules that can assume millions of different shapes." Carbon forms "a great variety of strong bonds" and endless shapes; silicon is "more fickle." Conrad's verdict on porting minds to silicon: "It's absurd to think you can remove the logic of conscious thought from its material base… The territory, the seat of intelligence, is proteins and sugars and fats and nucleic acids. Matter matters."
The Tactilizing Processor
A computer in a jar
Conrad's dream device holds no wires. Light-sensitive receptors release molecular shapes into a liquid; the shapes free-fall until they meet their complements and self-assemble into a "mosaic" — and that mosaic is the answer, coding a whole image (say, "snowshoe hare") the way a cloud of cAMP codes a signal in a neuron. It's five orders of magnitude slower than a digital switch — but it "considers all the inputs" at once, does fuzzy pattern recognition a supercomputer would need thousands of years to match, and rides a quantum "speedup effect." The likely first use: an organic front end — the eyes and ears that predigest ambiguous reality and hand it to a digital computer.
Directed Evolution
Breeding computers, drugs, and designs
If the parts don't exist, breed them. Conrad's "molecular computer factory" is "more like a giant breeding facility" — engineers become "the invisible hand of natural selection," setting the criteria and letting variation-and-selection find the solution. It already works: Gerald Joyce let RNA molecules "design themselves" against a target in just ten generations; Richard Dawkins bred lifelike "biomorphs" on screen; John Holland's genetic algorithms even let programs mate. The hard part for an engineer is the letting go: "I knew that I would have to give up control if I hoped to get real power — which is the power to adapt. I'll just have to evolve it, test it, and marvel at how well it works without knowing exactly why."
Silicon computing in a carbon key · bacteriorhodopsinThe bridge to biocomputing is already in the lab. Bacteriorhodopsin (BR), a protein from a salt-loving bacterium of the Great Salt Lake, kinks when hit by green light and unkinks with red — a light-driven switch that stores a 1 or a 0. Robert Birge's team laminated a thousand molecule-thick layers onto a quartz chip; suspended in a gel cube and read by two converging laser beams, BR promises 3-D optical (even holographic) memory far denser and faster than magnetic disks. Nature, as Felix Hong notes, "uses an eye pigment to pull down the sun" — and we borrow it to store our thoughts.
"No one can possibly simulate you or me with a system that is less complex than you or me."
Heinz Pagels · epigraph to Chapter 6
Chapter 7 · How Will We Conduct Business?
Section 08 · Closing the Loops in Commerce
Business Like a Redwood Forest
"Economies are like ecosystems," says AT&T's Braden Allenby. "Both take in energy and materials and transform them into products. The problem is that our economy performs a linear transformation, whereas nature's is cyclic." The movement to fix this — industrial ecology — would "conduct business the way a sun-soaked hickory forest recycles its leaves." Surprisingly, its evangelists sit in the executive chairs of the world's largest companies.
Linear vs. Cyclic · Closing the Loop
"Life juggles one set of pins and cycles them continually. A leaf falls to the forest floor only to be recycled… returned to the soil, where it is reabsorbed by the tree to make new leaves. Nothing is wasted, and the whole show runs on ambient solar energy." Industrial ecology asks: "what if our economy were to deliberately look and function like the natural world in which it is embedded?"
Type I · the opportunist
Ragweed
Pioneers (weeds, flour beetles) that "use resources as quickly as they can," maximize throughput, and move on. The Industrial Revolution — but on a finite planet with no exit and no "janitorial species" to recycle the corpses.
Type II · the transition
Berry Bush
Perennials in for "the longer haul." They make a few seeds and funnel energy into "hardy roots and sturdy stems," rebounding year after year. The bridge from pioneer to mature system.
Type III · the goal
Redwood
Mature ecosystems that "do more with less," in "relative equilibrium, taking out no more than they put in." Elaborate synergy, virtually no waste, only the sun imported. Where we must go.
The Ten Commandments of the Redwood Clan
How a mature ecosystem survives in place
Over billions of years, natural selection converged on the strategies of every mature, enduring ecosystem — the operating rules of a Type III community. If a company or economy lived by all ten, it would master "a trick that's as old as the first bacteria: life creating conditions conducive to life."
1
Use waste as a resourceclose the loops — everyone reincarnated inside someone else
2
Diversify and cooperate to fully use the habitatsymbiosis, not just competition
3
Gather and use energy efficientlyrun on current sunlight; 95% quantum efficiency
4
Optimize rather than maximizedo more with less; quality over quantity
5
Use materials sparinglythe honeycomb, the hollow bird bone
6
Don't foul their nestsmake toxins on demand, in small batches
7
Don't draw down resourceslive on interest, not principal
8
Remain in balance with the biosphereno large fluxes; the closed grand cycles
9
Run on informationrich feedback; avoid "overshoot"
10
Shop locally"nature doesn't commute to work"
The prototype · Kalundborg, DenmarkThe world's most elaborate eco-industrial park is a food web of companies feeding on each other's "waste." A power plant pipes surplus steam to a refinery, a pharmaceutical plant (Novo Nordisk), and 3,500 homes; its warm cooling water raises 250 tons of fish a year. Novo's nitrogen-rich slurry becomes free fertilizer for nearby farms; the refinery's waste gas becomes fuel and wallboard; the sulfur becomes sulfuric acid. "All waste is food." Take-back laws push the same logic to products: BMW's cars come apart on a 20-minute "unassembly line"; Xerox's parts-recovery saves $200 million a year.
Ecosystem attribute
Type I · Ragweed (where we are)
Type III · Redwood (where we must go)
Food chain
Linear
Weblike
Growth strategy
Rapid growth (r-selection)
Feedback control (K-selection)
Production
Quantity
Quality
Nutrient / mineral cycles
Open, poorly conserved
Closed, tightly cycled
Internal symbiosis & diversity
Undeveloped
Developed, high
Stability & information (feedback)
Poor, low
Good, high
Entropy (energy lost)
High
Low
After systems ecologist Howard T. Odum, adapted by Allenby & Cooper. Column 2 is the ragweed stage; column 3 is the blueprint for survival.
The lever · boundary conditionsHow do you steer "a gigantic many-armed octopus of an economy"? Allenby's answer: not by micromanaging, but by resetting the boundary conditions — "draw an arrow and dare companies to get there before their competitors." Let prices tell the truth (a single CFC aerosol can's true cost: ~$12,000; the Exxon Valdez raised GNP). As Paul Hawken urges, "tax bads, not goods." Do that, and you "give Adam Smith's invisible hand a green thumb." The functional economy points the same way: you don't want a heater, you want heating — so lease the service and let the maker keep, maintain, and reclaim the thing. "Leasing as a way of life" makes planned obsolescence obsolete.
Becoming more like a redwood than a ragweed"Now that our rootball has grown to fill the world, we realize: We have to learn to be self-renewing right where we are." That means "changing our very niche, our profession in the ecosystem" — replacing our Type I economy with Type III, loop by loop. Even the biggest firms are listening: "In the most unlikely and promising cross-fertilization of our times, the Birkenstocks are teaching the suits."
"Technologies that produce byproducts society cannot absorb are essentially failed technologies."
Daniel Chiras · Chapter 7
Chapter 8 · Where Will We Go From Here?
Section 09 · May Wonders Never Cease
Toward a Biomimetic Future
Benyus ends by becoming a biomimic herself. Her Montana pond had choked with duckweed; after two years of fighting it, she "simply stopped," sat on the bank, and remembered a healthy spring-fed pond nearby. She dredged, freed the buried spring, and the water cleared. That dialogue with the land — quiet, listen, echo, then tend — becomes her path for the whole culture.
Four Steps to a Biomimetic Future
Benyus's own pond taught the pattern: "I listened while the land spoke, and then I tried to mimic what I had heard." The uncovering of the buried spring was the echoing; the follow-through — revegetating with native plants so floods wouldn't suffocate it again — was the stewarding, "an ongoing thank-you for the wisdom I had acquired."
The Viability Screen
Ten questions to ask of any innovation
Instead of judging designs only by whether they profit us, Benyus offers life's own test — "Will it fit in? Will it last? Is there a precedent for this in nature?" If so, the answers to these will be yes:
Does it run on sunlight? · use only the energy it needs? · fit form to function? · recycle everything? · reward cooperation? · bank on diversity? · use local expertise? · curb excess from within? · tap the power of limits? — and one more the nine laws imply: Is it beautiful? "Any bio-inspired technology that diminishes diversity diminishes the very inspiration upon which it depends."
A species shaped to echoWhat is noteworthy about us? "By virtue of asking the question, we partly answer it." We — "the universe become conscious of itself," in Thomas Berry's phrase — are self-reflective, "uniquely positioned to seek nature's counsel, to learn, to echo, and to give thanks." This ability "to mentally scout the river of time" gives us an option no other species has: to change course, on purpose, before the wave breaks.
Biophilia · Why We'll Care
The love that keeps the library open
Benyus stakes the whole enterprise on a hunch E.O. Wilson named biophilia — "the connections that human beings subconsciously seek with the rest of life." We are wired, after four million years in wild company, to be drawn to living things — which is why we keep pets, tend gardens, and feel our shoulders drop at the sight of water and green. Biomimicry, she hopes, will "rekindle" that affiliation: the more we learn from organisms, the more we'll want to keep them alive. Wonder becomes the engine of conservation, because "we protect what we love." The alternative — knowing the price of everything and the value of nothing — is what emptied the library in the first place.
The oldest new ideaLearning from nature is not our invention — it is our tradition, one we abandoned. Indigenous peoples have always read the wild as a manual. And nature itself is the original biomimic: the harmless viceroy butterfly mimics the toxic monarch to borrow its protection; the walkingstick mimics a twig; whole lineages survive by echoing the successful form of another. To imitate life is only to rejoin "the rest of the imitators." We are late to a very old practice.
The blessing at the endBenyus closes with a Mohawk thanksgiving and a skein of geese — creatures who "know the way" south without a map, running on information older than memory. Her last words are a prayer of apprenticeship, not conquest: an offer to stop steering and start following, to let the ones who have lived here longest lead. "Thank you. Earth. You know the way."
"This time, we come not to learn about nature so that we might circumvent or control her, but to learn from nature, so that we might fit in, at last and for good, on the Earth from which we sprang."
Chapter 1 · Echoing Nature
Complete Reference
Section 10
The Complete Reference
The whole book in one view: each of the six great questions, the organism whose genius answers it, the researchers echoing it, and the lesson it teaches. Every chapter takes the same shape — a human problem, a living solution already field-tested for millions of years.
The Question
Learn From…
The Echo & the Innovators
How will we feed ourselves?
a Prairie
Perennial polyculture, self-fertilizing & self-weeding — The Land Institute (Wes Jackson, Jon Piper)
How will we harness energy?
a Leaf
Artificial photosynthesis & molecular solar batteries — Arizona State (Gust, the Moores, Woodbury)
How will we make things?
a Spider / Abalone
Self-assembling, protein-templated materials at room temperature — Sarikaya, Morse, Stuckey, Rieke, Mann
Molecular, shape-based, massively-parallel computing — Michael Conrad's "jigsaw computing"
How will we conduct business?
a Redwood Forest
Industrial ecology — closed loops, waste = food, Type I → Type III — Allenby, Tibbs, Cooper, Hawken
Nature's Nine Laws · at a glance
The canon, in one breath
Nature runs on sunlight · uses only the energy it needs · fits form to function · recycles everything · rewards cooperation · banks on diversity · demands local expertise · curbs excesses from within · and taps the power of limits. Live by these — and add Benyus's tenth question, "Is it beautiful?" — and a design earns its place "on this home that is ours, but not ours alone."
The Ten Commandments of the Redwood Clan
How a mature ecosystem does business
Benyus distills industrial ecology into ten rules a redwood forest already obeys — the operating manual for a Type III economy:
1
Use waste as a resource — one member's output is another's food.
2
Diversify and cooperate to use the habitat fully.
3
Gather and use energy efficiently, preferably from the sun.
4
Optimize rather than maximize.
5
Use materials sparingly.
6
Don't foul their nests — keep the workplace non-toxic.
7
Don't draw down resources — live on income, not capital.
8
Remain in balance with the biosphere.
9
Run on information — feedback keeps the system honest.
10
Shop locally — trade within your own watershed.
The core reframeBiomimicry is "innovation inspired by nature": nature as model (emulate the design), nature as measure (judge by life's ecological standard), and nature as mentor (a relationship based on learning, not extracting). "There is more to discover than to invent." The biomimic's stance is studentship first, then stewardship — because "the only way to keep learning from nature is to safeguard naturalness, the wellspring of good ideas."
"When we stare this deeply into nature's eyes, it takes our breath away… We realize that all our inventions have already appeared in nature in a more elegant form and at a lot less cost to the planet."