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Learn Biomimicry

Learn Biomimicry

E-learning

Cape Town, Western Province 8,273 followers

Grow your career through biomimicry with our biomimicry resources, short courses and advanced programmes.

About us

Learn Biomimicry offers world-leading and world-changing biomimicry courses that are practical and applied. Our course offering includes: 1. A free eBook - "A Field Guide to Biomimicry". This short resource will help you understand the basics of biomimicry in one read. Download it here: https://www.learnbiomimicry.com/ebook 2. Biomimicry short courses: focused on the foundational knowledge of biomimicry, these three short courses teach you the, why, what and how of biomimicry - so you can apply it. These courses are self-paced, accessible anywhere, at any time, and on any device. 3. Biomimicry practitioner programme: This is a 6-month part-time learning journey to empower you to confidently practise and apply biomimicry in your career, organisation, or in your next project. 4. Biomimicry educator programme: This is a 6-month part-time learning journey to enable you to confidently integrate biomimicry into your courses, workshops, and classrooms. We work with the planet’s best biomimicry practitioners, influential educators, and accomplished professionals to bring you nature’s winning strategies and guide you on how to apply them in your field.

Website
https://www.learnbiomimicry.com
Industry
E-learning
Company size
2-10 employees
Headquarters
Cape Town, Western Province
Type
Privately Held
Founded
2020
Specialties
Biomimicry, Online Learning, Nature-based Solutions, Innovation, Sustainability, and Circular Economy

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  • Learn Biomimicry reposted this

    View profile for Yoann Berno
    Yoann Berno Yoann Berno is an Influencer

    You don’t see reality. You see a filtered version of it 👁️🌈 Humans feel like we see everything. We don’t. Our vision is built on just 3 colour receptors. That gives us around 1 million colours. Sounds impressive. Until you compare it. 🕊️ A Pigeon has 5 receptors, including ultraviolet. They see patterns on feathers completely invisible to us. Entire social signals we can’t even imagine. 🦌 A Reindeer can see UV light, helping them detect predators through contrasts we’d miss entirely in snow. 🦋 Some Butterflies have up to 15 receptors, plus the ability to detect polarized light. Their world includes visual layers we don’t even have words for. 🦐 The Mantis shrimp has 16 receptors. It doesn’t just see more colors, it processes them differently, prioritizing speed over richness in a way we can’t replicate. Same planet. Completely different realities. What you call “color” is just a tiny slice of the electromagnetic spectrum. The rest? Invisible. Unimaginable. Always there. So here’s the real question 👇 What else do you think is “complete”… but is actually just your limited interface? 📌PS: Found this helpful? Join 18,000+ founders and investors leveling up their game to fix this climate mess. 👉 Subscribe to my newsletter and get actionable insights delivered weekly! 🌍🚀 https://lnkd.in/ektv3C_s #ColourVision #AnimalVision #Perception #ScienceFacts #NatureExplained #Perspective Credit: wildlenschronicleswlc

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  • Learn Biomimicry reposted this

    A honey bee under an electron microscope. 🐝🔬 We spend a lot of time talking about the latest technologies. But sometimes we forget that some of the most sophisticated solutions were created by nature millions of years ago. A bee's eyes are made up of thousands of tiny lenses, optimized for detecting movement and navigating its environment. Its wings are connected by microscopic hooks (hamuli) that lock together during flight, functioning surprisingly like Velcro. The closer you zoom in, the less it looks like an insect and the more it looks like engineering. #Biomimicry #Innovation #Foresight #HoneyBee #Science #Microscopy #NatureInspiredInnovation #SEM

  • Learn Biomimicry reposted this

    🔬 Curious about how many microplastics are there in your water? Here are three main methods for microplastics analysis that PolyGone utilizes: 1️⃣ Fluorescence Microscopy:  Uses fluorescent dyes to make microplastics glow under specific light wavelengths.  • Best for: Rapid screening of particle counts, sizes, and shapes (fibers, fragments, beads). 2️⃣ FTIR:  Directs infrared light onto particles to map and identify their exact polymer type.  • Best for: Identifying materials like PE, PP, or PET to trace their potential origin. 3️⃣ Pyrolysis GC-MS:  Thermally breaks down particles into molecular fragments for high-precision mass analysis.  • Best for: Polymer identification and quantitative analysis of micro- and nanoplastics in environmental and industrial samples. 🧪 Understanding what’s in our water is the first step toward fighting aquatic microplastic pollution. 🔗 Learn more about PolyGone’s lab water analysis services in the comments below! #microplastics #watertest #cleantech #plastic #cleanwater

  • Learn Biomimicry reposted this

    What an incredible creature Cut open an octopus... and what you find will rewrite everything you thought you knew about life. Three hearts — not one. Two pump blood exclusively to the gills. The third pushes it to the rest of the body. And that blood? It's blue. Copper-based. Running through a system so ancient, it predates dinosaurs by hundreds of millions of years. Its brain wraps entirely around its esophagus — meaning every single bite of food passes through the center of its mind. One wrong meal... and it damages its own intelligence. Hidden inside that mantle: a ink sac loaded with chemical weaponry, a funnel that jets water for instant escape, and a liver so complex it acts as both digestive organ and immune system simultaneously. This is not a simple sea creature. This is a living machine — engineered by evolution over 300 million years — into something so sophisticated, so alien, so perfect... that science is still struggling to fully understand it.

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  • What an incredible example of how simple operating rules (and rapid feedback loops) can create a complex, adaptable, highly functional outcome! A STUNNING example of self-organization and swarm intelligence 🐝 To protect their hive from predators, Giant Honeybees create a rippling effect called shimmering. The higher the threat, the faster the shimmer. Art in nature! What else can we learn from bees? #biomimicry #engineering #innovation #natureinspired #technology #biomimetics #bioinspired

  • What can we learn from mycelium? Nature doesn't create waste; it creates building blocks. By studying and mimicking the incredible binding properties of mycelium (the root network of fungi), Biohm has developed affordable, non-toxic, and fully biodegradable construction materials and insulation. This fungus-inspired innovation is helping us grow our built environment in harmony with nature. 🍄 Inspired by: Mycelium 📍 Where: UK 🎯 Innovation / Function: Biodegradable building materials ✏️ Who: Biohm Follow Learn Biomimicry for more biomimicry examples and a case study, or check out the complete list on our website. #biomaterials #architecture #biomimicry #sustainability #mycelium

  • How the Kingfisher, Owl, and Penguin solved Japan's biggest engineering headache. In the 1990s, Japan's Shinkansen bullet train had a problem. Every time it exited a tunnel at speed, it created a sonic boom loud enough to rattle windows and wake residents 400 metres away. Engineer Eiji Nakatsu was also a birdwatcher. He noticed that the Kingfisher's beak - perfectly tapered to pierce water without a splash - could solve the pressure wave at tunnel exits. Then he went further: → The Owl's serrated feathers — which break airflow into micro-turbulences — shaped the design of the pantograph (the electrical collector on top of the train) → The Penguin's body — optimised to move through both water and air — influenced the cross-section of the carriages The result? 10% faster. 15% less energy used. No more sonic booms. Nature had already solved this. We just needed someone curious enough to look. This is biomimicry, and it's a skill you can learn. #biomimicry #bioinspired #natureinspired #sustainableinnovation #engineering #innovate #design

  • Learn Biomimicry reposted this

    🌿 Are you looking to expand your biophilic design knowledge, but feeling overwhelmed by the options? Biophilic design, the practice of reconnecting humans to nature through the built environment, is no longer just a trend. It’s quickly becoming the leading nature-forward approach in architecture and interior design. With the massive surge in demand for well-being-focused spaces, educational programs are popping up everywhere. But there is an inconvenient truth: There is no single "best" course. The right choice entirely depends on your budget, your professional context, and your ultimate goals. Before you dive in, you need to ask yourself one question: Are you a Credential Seeker or a Practitioner? To help you cut through the noise, we’ve just launched The Complete Guide to Biophilic Design Courses (2026 Edition). Here is a quick snapshot of the landscape: 🛠️ 𝐓𝐡𝐞 𝐏𝐫𝐚𝐜𝐭𝐢𝐭𝐢𝐨𝐧𝐞𝐫’𝐬 𝐏𝐚𝐭𝐡 (𝐒𝐡𝐨𝐫𝐭 𝐂𝐨𝐮𝐫𝐬𝐞𝐬 & 𝐂𝐞𝐫𝐭𝐢𝐟𝐢𝐜𝐚𝐭𝐢𝐨𝐧𝐬) Best for working professionals, architects, and designers who need actionable skills now. 🌱 Learn Biophilic Design Short Course: ($199 USD) A practical, 3-module program built specifically for busy professionals to master the foundational science, the business case (ROI), and real-world application. Learn Biomimicry Biophilic Design 🌱 Living Future Accreditation (ILFI): ($800) A 20-hour, self-paced program focusing heavily on regenerative design implementation. Living Future 🌱 The Biophilic Design Institute: ($2,000) A 3-month hybrid cohort blending virtual sessions with immersive, nature-based experiences. The Biophilic Design Institute 🌱 Luminous Spaces: (From $595) A unique path fusing biophilic principles with a spiritual approach and Feng Shui. Luminous Spaces 🎓 𝐓𝐡𝐞 𝐀𝐜𝐚𝐝𝐞𝐦𝐢𝐜 𝐏𝐚𝐭𝐡 (𝐅𝐨𝐫𝐦𝐚𝐥 𝐃𝐞𝐠𝐫𝐞𝐞𝐬) Best for students and researchers seeking deep, multi-year foundational knowledge. 🌱 Unity Environmental University (USA): An online B.S. in Applied Psychology and Biophilic Design exploring the deep cognitive and physiological effects of nature on the brain. 🌱 NAFA (Singapore): A 3-year, on-campus B.A. (Honours) situated in a "City in a Garden," focusing on spatial design and physical practice. --- Theory alone will not change the world. It is only through practice and application that we can build a thriving, nature-connected future. Whether you are looking for a multi-year degree or a fast-paced short course to pitch to clients next week, the most important step is simply to start. 👇 Want the full breakdown? 🔗 https://buff.ly/LgvPjpY --- #BiophilicDesign #Architecture #InteriorDesign #SustainableDesign #GreenBuilding #RegenerativeDesign #ProfessionalDevelopment

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  • Harvard visualises photosynthesis for the first time Back in 2017, Biologist students in Harvard university wanted to let everyone see how Photosynthesis works since air is not visible in the eyes. Here you can see a plant creating oxygen the air that everyone breaths. Without plants, earth is a lifeless planet.

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