Biomimicry in Computing and AI: Nature-Inspired Solutions

How nature is transforming computing and ai — 6 biomimicry examples with real-world products and research.

Why Computing Needs Nature

Biomimicry is producing significant advances in computing.

This page documents 6 biological strategies with direct relevance to computing. Each links to a full organism page with the biological mechanism, the engineering principle, and the products or research that have already emerged.

What These Strategies Have in Common

The strategies below — despite coming from organisms as different as beetles, sponges, and ferns — tend to share a set of properties that make them attractive to computing engineers:

🌿 Want to learn biomimicry?

Courses endorsed by the Biomimicry Institute — from one-day introductions to the full Practitioner Programme.

Browse Courses →

📚 Recommended Reading

Biomimicry: Innovation Inspired by Nature by Janine Benyus
View on Amazon →
The Shark's Paintbrush by Jay Harman
View on Amazon →
Biomimicry in Architecture by Michael Pawlyn
View on Amazon →

Nature-Inspired Applications

Animal
How the bees inspired swarm intelligence algorithms — the biological mechanism, the engineering principle, and …
Protist
How the physarum polycephalum inspired network optimization algorithms — the biological mechanism, the engineering …
Plant
How the leaf venation inspired efficient heat exchanger networks — the biological mechanism, the engineering principle, …
Animal
How the emperor penguin inspired collective thermal management systems — the biological mechanism, the engineering …
Fungi
How the mycorrhizal fungi network inspired decentralized mesh communication networks — the biological mechanism, the …
Animal
How the starling murmuration inspired autonomous drone swarm coordination — the biological mechanism, the engineering …

Go Deeper

🌿 Learn Biomimicry

Courses endorsed by the Biomimicry Institute — from one-day introductions to the full Practitioner Programme.

Browse Courses →

📚 Recommended Books

Biomimicry: Innovation Inspired by Nature

The Shark's Paintbrush

🔬 Explore Further

The world's largest biomimicry database, curated by the Biomimicry Institute.

Visit AskNature.org →