Biological adhesive systems : from nature to technical and medical application / Janek von Byern, Ingo Grunwald, editors.

"J. Herbert Waite Like many graduate students before and after me I was There are so many species about which nothing is known, mesmerized by a proposition expressed years earlier by and the curse of not knowing is apathy. Krogh (1929) – namely that “for many problems there is Bioadhesion is th...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Byern, Janek von, Grunwald, Ingo
Format: Ebook
Language:English
Published: Vienna ; New York : Springer, [2010]
Subjects:
Online Access:Springer eBooks

MARC

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245 0 0 |a Biological adhesive systems :  |b from nature to technical and medical application /  |c Janek von Byern, Ingo Grunwald, editors. 
264 1 |a Vienna ;  |a New York :  |b Springer,  |c [2010] 
264 4 |c ©2010 
300 |a 1 online resource (xi, 305 pages) :  |b illustrations 
336 |a text  |b txt  |2 rdacontent 
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504 |a Includes bibliographical references and index. 
505 0 0 |t Part A: --  |t Bonding Single Pollen Grains Together: How and Why? /  |r Michael Hesse --  |t Deadly Glue — Adhesive Traps of Carnivorous Plants /  |r Wolfram Adlassnig, Thomas Lendl, Marianne Peroutka, Ingeborg Lang --  |t Bonding Tactics in Ctenophores — Morphology and Function of the Colloblast System /  |r Janek von Byern, Claudia E. Mills, Patrick Flammang --  |t Gastropod Secretory Glands and Adhesive Gels /  |r Andrew M. Smith --  |t Characterization of the Adhesive Systems in Cephalopods /  |r Norbert Cyran, Lisa Klinger, Robyn Scott, Charles Griffiths, Thomas Schwaha, Vanessa Zheden et al. --  |t Unravelling the Sticky Threads of Sea Cucumbers — A Comparative Study on Cuvierian Tubule Morphology and Histochemistry /  |r Pierre T. Becker, Patrick Flammang --  |t Adhesion Mechanisms Developed by Sea Stars: A Review of the Ultrastructure and Composition of Tube Feet and Their Secretion /  |r Elise Hennebert --  |t Adhesive Exocrine Glands in Insects: Morphology, Ultrastructure, and Adhesive Secretion /  |r Oliver Betz --  |t Mechanisms of Adhesion in Adult Barnacles /  |r Anne Marie Power, Waltraud Klepal, Vanessa Zheden, Jaimie Jonker, Paul McEvilly, Janek von Byern --  |t Morphology of the Adhesive System in the Sandcastle Worm, Phragmatopoma californica /  |r Ching Shuen Wang, Kelli K. Svendsen, Russell J. Stewart --  |t Adhesive Dermal Secretions of the Amphibia, with Particular Reference to the Australian Limnodynastid Genus Notaden /  |r Michael J. Tyler --  |t Part B: --  |t Renewable (Biological) Compounds in Adhesives for Industrial Applications /  |r Hermann Onusseit --  |t Bio-inspired Polyphenolic Adhesives for Medical and Technical Applications /  |r Klaus Rischka, Katharina Richter, Andreas Hartwig, Maria Kozielec, Klaus Slenzka, Robert Sader et al. --  |t Medical Products and Their Application Range /  |r Jessica Blume, Willi Schwotzer --  |t Fibrin: The Very First Biomimetic Glue — Still a Great Tool /  |r James Ferguson, Sylvia Nürnberger, Heinz Redl --  |t Properties and Potential Alternative Applications of Fibrin Glue /  |r Sylvia Nürnberger, Susanne Wolbank, Anja Peterbauer-Scherb, Tatjana J. Morton, Georg A. Feichtinger, Alfred Gugerell et al. --  |t Biodegradable (Meth)acrylate-based Adhesives for Surgical Applications /  |r Albrecht Berg, Fabian Peters, Matthias Schnabelrauch --  |t Byssus Formation in Mytilus /  |r Heather G. Silverman, Francisco F. Roberto --  |t Wet Performance of Biomimetic Fibrillar Adhesives /  |r K. H. Aaron Lau, Phillip B. Messersmith. 
520 |a "J. Herbert Waite Like many graduate students before and after me I was There are so many species about which nothing is known, mesmerized by a proposition expressed years earlier by and the curse of not knowing is apathy. Krogh (1929) – namely that “for many problems there is Bioadhesion is the adaptation featured in this book, an animal on which it can be most conveniently studied”. and biology has many adhesive practitioners. Indeed, This opinion became known as the August Krogh Prin- every living organism is adhesively assembled in the ciple and remains much discussed to this day, particu- most exquisite way. Clearly, speci? c adhesion needs to larly among comparative physiologists (Krebs, 1975). be distinguished from the opportunistic variety. I think The words “problems” and “animal” are key because of speci? c adhesion as the adhesion between cells in the they highlight the two fundamental and complementary same tissue, whereas opportunistic adhesion might be the foci of biological research: (1) expertise about an animal adhesion between pathogenic microbes and the urinary (zoo-centric), which is mostly observational and (2) a tract, or between a slug and the garden path. If oppor- mechanistic analysis of some problem in the animal’s life nistic bioadhesion is our theme, then there are still many history or physiology (problem-centric), which is usually practitioners but the subset is somewhat more select than a hypothesis-driven investigation. before."--Publisher's website. 
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650 0 |a Cell adhesion molecules.  |9 344897 
650 0 |a Cell adhesion.  |9 315089 
650 0 |a Adhesives.  |9 313380 
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700 1 |a Grunwald, Ingo.  |9 1096200 
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