Biomimetic design is often justified by the claim that evolution has refined biological systems under severe selective pressure; however, this claim is incomplete. Evolution does not produce optimal solutions, but constrained trade-off resolutions. The translational question is therefore not whether a biological system performs the desired function, but whether the functional principle can survive separation from the system that produced it. Convergent evolution, where distantly related lineages independently arrive at similar solutions to the same functional problem, raises the probability that such solutions reflect physical or chemical constraints, which are stronger candidates for transfer into biomaterial design. Lineage-isolated solutions require a different test, namely whether the function reduces to a feature that can be reproduced outside the source organism. The argument is demonstrated through a convergence × reducibility matrix and an ex natura protocol from a biological phenomenon to a testable biomaterial claim. Biomimetics earns its place not as a universal design doctrine, but in those situations where evolutionary trade-off resolutions can survive translation into safe and manufacturable biomaterials.
Ozren Polašek (Mon,) studied this question.