Felted: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|Biological term}} |
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{{For|the fabric|Felt}} |
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{{Technical|date=December 2022}} |
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'''Felted''' is a term variously applied to hairy or otherwise filamentous material that is densely packed or tangled, forming [[felt]] or felt-like structures. Apart from fibres in felted fabric manufactured by humans, the term |
'''Felted''' is a term variously applied to hairy or otherwise filamentous material that is densely packed or tangled, forming [[felt]] or felt-like structures. Apart from fibres in felted fabric manufactured by humans, the term ''felted'' may apply to the condition of hair such as in the pathological condition known as ''[[Plica neuropathica|felted hair]]'', or it may apply to the tangled threads of the tissue of certain fungi, to matted fibres in animal connective tissue, or to the felted outer coat of certain plants. To say that something is felted need not imply that any processes of matting, condensing and pressing fibres have been applied as in the processes for artificial production of felt fabric. Depending on the nature of the felted material, it might rely purely on the scaly or barbed texture of the matted fibres to prevent unraveling, but commonly it will include clayey or sticky materials for its structural integrity, or for increased density. |
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==Zoological use of the term== |
==Zoological use of the term== |
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Examples of the description of animal tissues as |
Examples of the description of animal tissues as felted include classes of [[connective tissue]] such as the [[dermis]] which the classic [[Gray's Anatomy]] describes as: "felted connective tissue, with a varying amount of elastic fibers and numerous bloodvessels, lymphatics, and nerves." Also, in describing the external coat or ''[[Tunica externa (vessels)|tunica adventitia]]'' of an artery, Gray says: "...consists mainly of fine and closely felted bundles of white connective tissue..."<ref name= "GraysAn">{{Cite book | last = Gray | first = Henry | author-link = Henry Gray | date = 1918 | title = Anatomy of the Human Body | url = https://archive.org/details/anatomyofhumanbo1918gray | edition = 20th | others = Revised by [[Warren Harmon Lewis|Warren H. Lewis]] | publisher = Lea & Febiger | location = Philadelphia | language = en | access-date = 27 December 2022 |
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}}</ref>{{Page needed|date=December 2022}} In such classes of connective tissue the felted structure is very important; it is versatile in resisting tearing by distributing localised [[Stress (mechanics)|stresses]] and it imparts strength together with [[Shock (mechanics)|shock]] absorption and [[Elastic modulus|elasticity]] in two or three dimensions at once, irrespective of the shape of the tissue.<ref name="Vogel">{{Cite book | last = Vogel | first = Steven | author-link = Steven Vogel | date = 2000 | chapter = Chapter 5: The Stiff and the Soft | title = Cats' Paws And Catapults: Mechanical Worlds Of Nature And People | publisher = Penguin | isbn = 978-0140277333 | language = en }}</ref>{{Page needed|date=December 2022}} In other words, suitable types of felting can yield controllable [[isotropy]] or [[anisotropy]] in the behaviour of a structure.<ref name= "GordStruc">{{Cite book | last = Gordon | first = J. E. | author-link = J. E. Gordon | date = 2003 | title = Structures, Or Why Things Don't Fall Down | publisher = Da Capo | isbn = 978-0306812835 | language = en }}</ref>{{Page needed|date=December 2022}} |
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[[File:Haare-kutikula.png|thumb| |
[[File:Haare-kutikula.png|thumb|upright=0.9|Drawing of cuticular surfaces of hairs of dog, cat, and human (left to right). The surface texture affects the felting behaviour of the various hair types]] |
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[[File:Down Awn and guard hairs of cat 2012 11 13 9203r.JPG|thumb|Down (woolly) hair, awn hair and guard hair of domestic cat (left to right).]] |
[[File:Down Awn and guard hairs of cat 2012 11 13 9203r.JPG|thumb|upright=0.9|Down (woolly) hair, awn hair and guard hair of domestic cat (left to right).]] |
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[[File:Carder bee - felted nesting materia IMG 0273s.JPG|thumb| |
[[File:Carder bee - felted nesting materia IMG 0273s.JPG|thumb|upright=0.9|Felted plant fibre from nest of a Southern African carder bee]] |
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Other examples of felted material in animal structures include fibrous structures coating the [[integument]] of some insects. Usually such a felted coating is not living tissue, but consists of waxy fibres and is not particularly strong, but serves as protection from either excessive desiccation or moisture. It is particularly common in some families of the [[Hemiptera]]. In some species it occurs only as an outer coat of the immature insect, but in others, such as many of the [[Coccoidea]], including the "Australian bug", ''[[Icerya purchasi]]'' and [[cochineal]], ''Dactylopius'' species, it is secreted throughout the life of the insect and serves largely to protect the eggs rather than the insect.<ref name= " |
Other examples of felted material in animal structures include fibrous structures coating the [[integument]] of some insects. Usually such a felted coating is not living tissue, but consists of waxy fibres and is not particularly strong, but serves as protection from either excessive desiccation or moisture. It is particularly common in some families of the [[Hemiptera]]. In some species it occurs only as an outer coat of the immature insect, but in others, such as many of the [[Coccoidea]], including the "Australian bug", ''[[Icerya purchasi]]'' and [[cochineal]], ''Dactylopius'' species, it is secreted throughout the life of the insect and serves largely to protect the eggs rather than the insect.<ref name= "WeavingPickerGriffiths">{{Cite book | last1= Weaving | first1 = Alan | last2 = Picker | first2 = Mike | last3 = Griffiths | first3 = Charles Llewellyn | date = 2003 | title = Field Guide to Insects of South Africa | publisher = New Holland Publishers, Ltd | isbn = 1-86872-713-0 | language = en }}</ref>{{Pages needed|date=December 2022}} In other species, such as many of the woolly aphids, the [[Eriosomatinae]], the most fluff is borne on the adult insect.<ref name="Costa"> |
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{{Cite book | last = Costa | first = James T. | date = 2006 | chapter = Chapter 9 | title = The Other Insect Societies | publisher = Belknap Press | isbn = 978-0674021631 | language = en }}</ref>{{Page needed|date=December 2022}} |
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The distinction between felted and other fibrous materials is not always sharp. For example, although truly felted hair on healthy mammals is unusual, many animals, especially in seasonally cold or wet climates or environments, often have a so-called undercoat of [[Coat (animal)|down hair]] plus [[awn hair]] that usually lies hidden beneath the outer coat of guard hairs,<ref>Robinson |
The distinction between felted and other fibrous materials is not always sharp. For example, although truly felted hair on healthy mammals is unusual, many animals, especially in seasonally cold or wet climates or environments, often have a so-called undercoat of [[Coat (animal)|down hair]] plus [[awn hair]] that usually lies hidden beneath the outer coat of guard hairs,<ref name="Robinson">{{Cite book | last = Robinson | first = Roy | date = 1977 | title = Genetics for Cat Breeders | publisher = Pergamon | isbn = 0-08-021209-3 | language = en }}</ref>{{Page needed|date=December 2022}} and may form a mat of lightly felted wool. Such down hairs as a rule are crimped into a finely woolly texture and contain waxy, water-repellent [[lanolin]]; in a mass they serve to retain insulating air and exclude water. In many species that live in seasonally frigid zones the winter down hair is shed in clumps during springtime. This is exploited in species such as the muskox; herders collect the wool for commercial purposes without any need for shearing.<ref name="Feldhamer">{{Cite book | last = Feldhamer | first = George A. | title = Mammalogy: Adaptation, Diversity, Ecology | publisher = The Johns Hopkins University | isbn = 978-0801886959 | language = en }}</ref>{{Page needed|date=December 2022}} |
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===Felting activities of animals=== |
===Felting activities of animals=== |
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Many species of animals actively employ felting behaviour in preparing shelters for themselves or their young. It is not always possible to tell when such felting is purely incidental, but many species show behaviour patterns clearly adapted to the production of felted material suited to shelter and protection. The linings of nests of small rodents and small carnivores are common examples; some mice for example, such as ground-dwelling ''Mus'' species in parts of Africa build spherical nests of assorted fibres in burrows or under large flat objects. Some, such as various species of rabbit, in particular ''[[Sylvilagus]]'' species, use their own fur as a major component of their nesting material.<ref name="LongCA">Long, Charles A. The Wild Mammals of Wisconsin (Faunistica). Pensoft Publishers 2008. {{ISBN|978-9546423139}}</ref> Small predatory mammals such the least weasel largely collect fur from their prey, or occupy prey nests ready lined; such fur commonly forms a felted nest lining.<ref name="HartleyHTJ">Jackson, Hartley H.T. et al. Mammals of Wisconsin. Publisher: University of Wisconsin 1961. {{ISBN|978-0299021504}}</ref> |
Many species of animals actively employ felting behaviour in preparing shelters for themselves or their young. It is not always possible to tell when such felting is purely incidental, but many species show behaviour patterns clearly adapted to the production of felted material suited to shelter and protection. The linings of nests of small rodents and small carnivores are common examples; some mice for example, such as ground-dwelling ''Mus'' species in parts of Africa build spherical nests of assorted fibres in burrows or under large flat objects. Some, such as various species of rabbit, in particular ''[[Sylvilagus]]'' species, use their own fur as a major component of their nesting material.<ref name="LongCA">Long, Charles A. The Wild Mammals of Wisconsin (Faunistica). Pensoft Publishers 2008. {{ISBN|978-9546423139}}</ref>{{Page needed|date=December 2022}} Small predatory mammals such the least weasel largely collect fur from their prey, or occupy prey nests ready lined; such fur commonly forms a felted nest lining.<ref name="HartleyHTJ">Jackson, Hartley H.T. et al. Mammals of Wisconsin. Publisher: University of Wisconsin 1961. {{ISBN|978-0299021504}}</ref>{{Page needed|date=December 2022}} |
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[[File:Common eider nest.JPG|thumb|Common eider nest, with the eggs deep in the loosely piled down.]] |
[[File:Common eider nest.JPG|thumb|upright=0.9|Common eider nest, with the eggs deep in the loosely piled down.]] |
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Birds vary enormously in the nests they make and the materials they use. Among those that use fibres and fibrous materials such as grass for nesting, many tend to weave the nests, but even nests that initially are purely woven, such as those of weaver birds, later are lined with downy materials that largely become felted, both with each other and with the surrounding nest material. Similarly birds such as sparrows, that build large, twiggy nests, line them with downy material. Many kinds of birds however do little weaving in building their nests, but instead construct their nests mainly of fibrous and downy materials such as fine wool, moss, lichen, spiders' nests, tufts of cotton, [[Arachnoid (botany)|arachnoid]] fluff from plants, or bark scales, supported by twigs or the walls of burrows and the like, depending on the circumstances within which they nest. [[James Rennie (naturalist)|James Rennie]] remarked: "A circumstance also never neglected, is to bind the nest firmly into the forks of the bush where it is placed, by twining bands of moss, felted with wool, round all the contiguous branches, both below and at the sides. During the nesting season such birds commonly become such avid seekers of suitable materials that down feathers or tufts of wool may be used as bait for trapping them. Birds that concentrate heavily on felted nests include goldfinches (''[[Carduelis]]'' species) and related species. Hummingbirds tend to use a lot of spiderweb together with moss and similar material. Small warbler-like birds of many genera such as [[Prinia]] and [[Cisticola]] make their nests either heavily lined with, or entirely of felted material.<ref name="RennieNHB">Rennie, James. Natural history of birds : their architecture habits and faculties. Chapter VIII. New York : Harper 1845 May be downloaded from: https://archive.org/details/naturalhistoryof00renn</ref><ref>Phil Hockey; Peter Ryan; Richard Dean. Roberts Birds of Southern Africa. Publisher: John Voelcker Bird Book Fund. 2005 {{ISBN|9780620340533}}</ref> Ground nesting birds often use felted material rather than woven; it usually suffices and some of the structures can be deceptively sophisticated. For example, the [[common eider]], famous for the valuable down harvested from its abandoned nests, lays its eggs in very lightly felted bowls of its own down; simple though this seems, the thick, soft layer provides exceptional insulation. |
Birds vary enormously in the nests they make and the materials they use. Among those that use fibres and fibrous materials such as grass for nesting, many tend to weave the nests, but even nests that initially are purely woven, such as those of weaver birds, later are lined with downy materials that largely become felted, both with each other and with the surrounding nest material. Similarly birds such as sparrows, that build large, twiggy nests, line them with downy material. Many kinds of birds however do little weaving in building their nests, but instead construct their nests mainly of fibrous and downy materials such as fine wool, moss, lichen, spiders' nests, tufts of cotton, [[Arachnoid (botany)|arachnoid]] fluff from plants, or bark scales, supported by twigs or the walls of burrows and the like, depending on the circumstances within which they nest. [[James Rennie (naturalist)|James Rennie]] remarked: "A circumstance also never neglected, is to bind the nest firmly into the forks of the bush where it is placed, by twining bands of moss, felted with wool, round all the contiguous branches, both below and at the sides. During the nesting season such birds commonly become such avid seekers of suitable materials that down feathers or tufts of wool may be used as bait for trapping them. Birds that concentrate heavily on felted nests include goldfinches (''[[Carduelis]]'' species) and related species. Hummingbirds tend to use a lot of spiderweb together with moss and similar material. Small warbler-like birds of many genera such as [[Prinia]] and [[Cisticola]] make their nests either heavily lined with, or entirely of felted material.<ref name="RennieNHB">Rennie, James. Natural history of birds : their architecture habits and faculties. Chapter VIII. New York : Harper 1845 May be downloaded from: https://archive.org/details/naturalhistoryof00renn</ref><ref>Phil Hockey; Peter Ryan; Richard Dean. Roberts Birds of Southern Africa. Publisher: John Voelcker Bird Book Fund. 2005 {{ISBN|9780620340533}}</ref>{{Pages needed|date=December 2022}} Ground nesting birds often use felted material rather than woven; it usually suffices and some of the structures can be deceptively sophisticated. For example, the [[common eider]], famous for the valuable down harvested from its abandoned nests, lays its eggs in very lightly felted bowls of its own down; simple though this seems, the thick, soft layer provides exceptional insulation.{{Cn|date=December 2022}} |
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===Invertebrates=== |
===Invertebrates=== |
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[[File:Phyllaphis fagi infestation.jpg|thumb| |
[[File:Phyllaphis fagi infestation.jpg|thumb|upright=0.9|''[[Phyllaphis fagi]]'', Eriosomatinae, woolly beech aphid on a leaf]] |
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[[File:Icerya purchasi 1.JPG|thumb| |
[[File:Icerya purchasi 1.JPG|thumb|upright=0.9|''[[Icerya purchasi]]'' female on her fibrous waxy protection for the eggs]] |
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[[File:Cochenille z02.jpg|thumb| |
[[File:Cochenille z02.jpg|thumb|upright=0.9|In [[cochineal]] females, the white waxy fibre does not cover the insect, but rather the eggs.]] |
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[[File:Ctenizidae Cork-lid Trapdoor spider dwelling IMG 4025s.JPG|thumb| |
[[File:Ctenizidae Cork-lid Trapdoor spider dwelling IMG 4025s.JPG|thumb|upright=0.9|Spider trapdoor of silk and clay]] |
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⚫ | Various insects also create felted materials, generally forming part of the shelter for their young. [[Burying beetle]]s are known for stripping the fur or feathers from the carcasses that they prepare for their young, and using the material to line and reinforce the crypt that they dig.<ref name="Burtons">Burton, Maurice; Burton, Robert. International Wildlife Encyclopedia. Publisher: Marshall Cavendish 2002. {{ISBN|978-0761472698}}</ref> it is however unclear whether this habit is anything more than incidental, and also how relatively important it is in the different species of the genus. As long ago as the 19th century at least, [[Jean-Henri Fabre]] demonstrated that the species that he investigated most certainly did not depend on feathered or hairy food items, being quite able to utilise reptiles and amphibians and fishes.<ref>Fabre, Jean-Henri. Tr. Teixeira de Mattos, Alexander. The glow-worm and other beetles Publisher: New York : Dodd, Mead and Company, 1919</ref> However, there is no doubt about the use of felted fibre by various species of bees, in particular, those members of the [[Megachilidae]] that are known as carder bees build their nests mainly of plant fibre collected from [[Arachnoid (botany)|arachnoid]] plants, though they also might add fibre from other sources, such as animal wool. The sheer amount of the material that they gather often is startling, bearing in mind that the species of bees are not at all large.<ref name= "JHFBB">Fabre, Jean-Henri; Translated by Alexander Teixeira de Mattos; The Bramble-bees and others; Pub: Dodd, Mead, New York, 1915. Download from: https://archive.org/details/bramblebeesother00fabr</ref> |
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⚫ | Various insects also create felted materials, generally forming part of the shelter for their young. [[Burying beetle]]s are known for stripping the fur or feathers from the carcasses that they prepare for their young, and using the material to line and reinforce the crypt that they dig.<ref name="Burtons">Burton, Maurice; Burton, Robert. International Wildlife Encyclopedia. Publisher: Marshall Cavendish 2002. {{ISBN|978-0761472698}}</ref>{{Page needed|date=December 2022}} it is however unclear whether this habit is anything more than incidental, and also how relatively important it is in the different species of the genus. As long ago as the 19th century at least, [[Jean-Henri Fabre]] demonstrated that the species that he investigated most certainly did not depend on feathered or hairy food items, being quite able to utilise reptiles and amphibians and fishes.<ref>Fabre, Jean-Henri. Tr. Teixeira de Mattos, Alexander. The glow-worm and other beetles Publisher: New York : Dodd, Mead and Company, 1919</ref>{{Page needed|date=December 2022}} However, there is no doubt about the use of felted fibre by various species of bees, in particular, those members of the [[Megachilidae]] that are known as carder bees build their nests mainly of plant fibre collected from [[Arachnoid (botany)|arachnoid]] plants, though they also might add fibre from other sources, such as animal wool. The sheer amount of the material that they gather often is startling, bearing in mind that the species of bees are not at all large.<ref name= "JHFBB">Fabre, Jean-Henri; Translated by Alexander Teixeira de Mattos; The Bramble-bees and others; Pub: Dodd, Mead, New York, 1915. Download from: https://archive.org/details/bramblebeesother00fabr</ref>{{Page needed|date=December 2022}} |
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⚫ | Some invertebrates other than insects construct felted structures. Among those spiders are the most conspicuous. Many or most spider egg cases are partly or largely felted silk as well as woven or wound. The lids of various species of [[List of trapdoor spiders|trapdoor spider]] burrows vary in their construction, but they are largely of earth and similar material reinforced with partly felted silk. |
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⚫ | Some invertebrates other than insects construct felted structures. Among those spiders are the most conspicuous. Many or most spider egg cases are partly or largely felted silk as well as woven or wound. The lids of various species of [[List of trapdoor spiders|trapdoor spider]] burrows vary in their construction, but they are largely of earth and similar material reinforced with partly felted silk.{{Cn|date=December 2022}} |
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==Botanical use of the term== |
==Botanical use of the term== |
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[[File:Oldenburgia grandis Emerging felted bud IMG 5837.JPG|thumb| |
[[File:Oldenburgia grandis Emerging felted bud IMG 5837.JPG|thumb|upright=0.9|''[[Oldenburgia grandis]]'' leaves are felted when emerging from the bud, but lose their covering as they mature.]] |
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[[File:Jardin des plantes Paris Cephalocereus senilis.JPG|thumb| |
[[File:Jardin des plantes Paris Cephalocereus senilis.JPG|thumb|upright=0.9|''Cephalocereus senilis'', showing felted radial spines]] |
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[[File:Senecio haworthii Felted leaves 2012 07 19 7536.JPG|thumb|''[[Senecio haworthii]]'' has permanently felted leaves.]] |
[[File:Senecio haworthii Felted leaves 2012 07 19 7536.JPG|thumb|upright=0.9|''[[Senecio haworthii]]'' has permanently felted leaves.]] |
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⚫ | In botanical terminology, ''felted'' typically is defined in terms such as "matted with intertwined hairs".<ref name= "BotGloss">Jackson |
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⚫ | In botanical terminology, ''felted'' typically is defined in terms such as "matted with intertwined hairs".<ref name= "BotGloss">{{Cite book | last = Jackson | first = Benjamin Daydon | author-link = Benjamin Daydon Jackson | date = 1928 | title = A Glossary of Botanic Terms with their Derivation and Accent | url = https://archive.org/details/glossaryofbotani1928jack | publisher = Gerald Duckworth & Co. | location = London | edition = 4th | language = en | access-date = 27 December 2022 | via = [[Biodiversity Heritage Library]] }}</ref> However, plants may be covered in several different ways, and several different terms have been coined to describe them. Not all textbooks use the same terms, or use them in the same way. The term ''felted'' is commonly used in describing any part of a plant covered with dense white fur, whether tangled or not. Part of the reason is that plants themselves vary so much that there seldom is much practical value to trying to be too precise; for example there is no clear boundary to separate terms such as ''felt(ed)'', ''[[Arachnoid (botany)|arachnoid]]'', ''[[indumentum]]'' and ''[[tomentose]]'', and usages vary. |
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In botany, as opposed to mycology, |
In botany, as opposed to mycology, ''felted'' seldom refers to internal tissues, but rather to furriness on the outside of leaves or stems. The function of the covering is always protective, sometimes against grazing or browsing animals, sometimes against wind or windblown sand, sometimes against intense sunshine or ultraviolet, and sometimes against drought and desiccation. Two illustrative examples are: ''Oldenburgia grandis'', and ''Senecio haworthii''. The former is a tree that grows in moderately harsh circumstances, but with a reasonable amount of seasonal rain. Its leaves are large, being broad and typically about 30 cm long. While growing to their full size they are vulnerable, so it is quite plausible that being felted protects them from browsers, ultraviolet, drought, and heat. Once their tissues have hardened and become rich in fibre and tannins, they can afford to lose their felt. In this respect they resemble many other plants whose leaves pass through vulnerable phases as they mature, though not all strategies are based on felt. |
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''Senecio haworthii'' grows under far more dramatically arid conditions than ''Oldenburgia''; its native habitat also is hotter and with a higher irradiation intensity. The plant is fairly poisonous, so it is not much browsed, though some caterpillars will eat its succulent leaves. Accordingly, its need for protection does not change much at any time of the year, and some leaves will survive for several years, retaining their felting throughout. |
''Senecio haworthii'' grows under far more dramatically arid conditions than ''Oldenburgia''; its native habitat also is hotter and with a higher irradiation intensity. The plant is fairly poisonous, so it is not much browsed, though some caterpillars will eat its succulent leaves. Accordingly, its need for protection does not change much at any time of the year, and some leaves will survive for several years, retaining their felting throughout. |
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In ''[[Cephalocereus senilis]]'' (old man cactus) radial spines grow into a tangled coating of spectacular white hair that conceal both the green tissue and the formidable sharp central spines beneath. It is only marginally felted, but forms a powerful simultaneous protection against intense radiation, wind, frost, and herbivores of various sizes.<ref>Mauseth, James D. Structure–Function Relationships in Highly Modified Shoots of Cactaceae. Annals of Botany 98: 901–926, 2006 doi:10.1093/aob/mcl133, available online at www.aob.oxfordjournals.org</ref> The woolly masses of fibres on such cacti have been used as stuffing for pillows and for similar applications.<ref>Powell, A. Michael, Weedin, James F. ''Cacti of the Trans-Pecos and Adjacent Areas''. Publisher: Texas Tech University Press 2004. {{ISBN|978-0896725317}}</ref> |
In ''[[Cephalocereus senilis]]'' (old man cactus) radial spines grow into a tangled coating of spectacular white hair that conceal both the green tissue and the formidable sharp central spines beneath. It is only marginally felted, but forms a powerful simultaneous protection against intense radiation, wind, frost, and herbivores of various sizes.<ref>Mauseth, James D. Structure–Function Relationships in Highly Modified Shoots of Cactaceae. Annals of Botany 98: 901–926, 2006 doi:10.1093/aob/mcl133, available online at www.aob.oxfordjournals.org</ref>{{Page needed|date=December 2022}} The woolly masses of fibres on such cacti have been used as stuffing for pillows and for similar applications.<ref>Powell, A. Michael, Weedin, James F. ''Cacti of the Trans-Pecos and Adjacent Areas''. Publisher: Texas Tech University Press 2004. {{ISBN|978-0896725317}}</ref>{{Page needed|date=December 2022}} |
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==Mycological use of the term== |
==Mycological use of the term== |
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[[File:Amanita muscaria G2.jpg|thumb|Amanita muscaria growing through the volva, the remnant felted tissue forming spots on the surface]] |
[[File:Amanita muscaria G2.jpg|thumb|upright=0.9|''Amanita muscaria'' growing through the volva, the remnant felted tissue forming spots on the surface]] |
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Most fungal tissue is filamentous; its very nature predisposes it to grow into tangles that lend themselves to felting. Whereas vascular plants seldom have cells that grow into forms that can form massive tangles, fungi hardly can form tissues at all except by tangling and felting their [[hypha]]l filaments. Practically every mass of mushroom tissue, including cords and membranes, is formed of [[Anastomosis|anastomosed]] and felted hyphae. The picturesque spots on the caps of ''[[Amanita muscaria]]'' consist of felted patches of remnant tissue from the [[Volva (mycology)|volva]].<ref>Moore, David. Robson, Geoffrey D. Trinci, Anthony P. J. 21st Century Guidebook to Fungi. Publisher: Cambridge University Press 2011 {{ISBN|978-0521186957}}</ref> |
Most fungal tissue is filamentous; its very nature predisposes it to grow into tangles that lend themselves to felting. Whereas vascular plants seldom have cells that grow into forms that can form massive tangles, fungi hardly can form tissues at all except by tangling and felting their [[hypha]]l filaments. Practically every mass of mushroom tissue, including cords and membranes, is formed of [[Anastomosis|anastomosed]] and felted hyphae. The picturesque spots on the caps of ''[[Amanita muscaria]]'' consist of felted patches of remnant tissue from the [[Volva (mycology)|volva]].<ref>Moore, David. Robson, Geoffrey D. Trinci, Anthony P. J. 21st Century Guidebook to Fungi. Publisher: Cambridge University Press 2011 {{ISBN|978-0521186957}}</ref>{{Page needed|date=December 2022}} |
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==References== |
==References== |
Revision as of 02:12, 28 December 2022
This article may be too technical for most readers to understand.(December 2022) |
Felted is a term variously applied to hairy or otherwise filamentous material that is densely packed or tangled, forming felt or felt-like structures. Apart from fibres in felted fabric manufactured by humans, the term felted may apply to the condition of hair such as in the pathological condition known as felted hair, or it may apply to the tangled threads of the tissue of certain fungi, to matted fibres in animal connective tissue, or to the felted outer coat of certain plants. To say that something is felted need not imply that any processes of matting, condensing and pressing fibres have been applied as in the processes for artificial production of felt fabric. Depending on the nature of the felted material, it might rely purely on the scaly or barbed texture of the matted fibres to prevent unraveling, but commonly it will include clayey or sticky materials for its structural integrity, or for increased density.
Zoological use of the term
Examples of the description of animal tissues as felted include classes of connective tissue such as the dermis which the classic Gray's Anatomy describes as: "felted connective tissue, with a varying amount of elastic fibers and numerous bloodvessels, lymphatics, and nerves." Also, in describing the external coat or tunica adventitia of an artery, Gray says: "...consists mainly of fine and closely felted bundles of white connective tissue..."[1][page needed] In such classes of connective tissue the felted structure is very important; it is versatile in resisting tearing by distributing localised stresses and it imparts strength together with shock absorption and elasticity in two or three dimensions at once, irrespective of the shape of the tissue.[2][page needed] In other words, suitable types of felting can yield controllable isotropy or anisotropy in the behaviour of a structure.[3][page needed]
Other examples of felted material in animal structures include fibrous structures coating the integument of some insects. Usually such a felted coating is not living tissue, but consists of waxy fibres and is not particularly strong, but serves as protection from either excessive desiccation or moisture. It is particularly common in some families of the Hemiptera. In some species it occurs only as an outer coat of the immature insect, but in others, such as many of the Coccoidea, including the "Australian bug", Icerya purchasi and cochineal, Dactylopius species, it is secreted throughout the life of the insect and serves largely to protect the eggs rather than the insect.[4][pages needed] In other species, such as many of the woolly aphids, the Eriosomatinae, the most fluff is borne on the adult insect.[5][page needed]
The distinction between felted and other fibrous materials is not always sharp. For example, although truly felted hair on healthy mammals is unusual, many animals, especially in seasonally cold or wet climates or environments, often have a so-called undercoat of down hair plus awn hair that usually lies hidden beneath the outer coat of guard hairs,[6][page needed] and may form a mat of lightly felted wool. Such down hairs as a rule are crimped into a finely woolly texture and contain waxy, water-repellent lanolin; in a mass they serve to retain insulating air and exclude water. In many species that live in seasonally frigid zones the winter down hair is shed in clumps during springtime. This is exploited in species such as the muskox; herders collect the wool for commercial purposes without any need for shearing.[7][page needed]
Felting activities of animals
Many species of animals actively employ felting behaviour in preparing shelters for themselves or their young. It is not always possible to tell when such felting is purely incidental, but many species show behaviour patterns clearly adapted to the production of felted material suited to shelter and protection. The linings of nests of small rodents and small carnivores are common examples; some mice for example, such as ground-dwelling Mus species in parts of Africa build spherical nests of assorted fibres in burrows or under large flat objects. Some, such as various species of rabbit, in particular Sylvilagus species, use their own fur as a major component of their nesting material.[8][page needed] Small predatory mammals such the least weasel largely collect fur from their prey, or occupy prey nests ready lined; such fur commonly forms a felted nest lining.[9][page needed]
Birds vary enormously in the nests they make and the materials they use. Among those that use fibres and fibrous materials such as grass for nesting, many tend to weave the nests, but even nests that initially are purely woven, such as those of weaver birds, later are lined with downy materials that largely become felted, both with each other and with the surrounding nest material. Similarly birds such as sparrows, that build large, twiggy nests, line them with downy material. Many kinds of birds however do little weaving in building their nests, but instead construct their nests mainly of fibrous and downy materials such as fine wool, moss, lichen, spiders' nests, tufts of cotton, arachnoid fluff from plants, or bark scales, supported by twigs or the walls of burrows and the like, depending on the circumstances within which they nest. James Rennie remarked: "A circumstance also never neglected, is to bind the nest firmly into the forks of the bush where it is placed, by twining bands of moss, felted with wool, round all the contiguous branches, both below and at the sides. During the nesting season such birds commonly become such avid seekers of suitable materials that down feathers or tufts of wool may be used as bait for trapping them. Birds that concentrate heavily on felted nests include goldfinches (Carduelis species) and related species. Hummingbirds tend to use a lot of spiderweb together with moss and similar material. Small warbler-like birds of many genera such as Prinia and Cisticola make their nests either heavily lined with, or entirely of felted material.[10][11][pages needed] Ground nesting birds often use felted material rather than woven; it usually suffices and some of the structures can be deceptively sophisticated. For example, the common eider, famous for the valuable down harvested from its abandoned nests, lays its eggs in very lightly felted bowls of its own down; simple though this seems, the thick, soft layer provides exceptional insulation.[citation needed]
Invertebrates
Various insects also create felted materials, generally forming part of the shelter for their young. Burying beetles are known for stripping the fur or feathers from the carcasses that they prepare for their young, and using the material to line and reinforce the crypt that they dig.[12][page needed] it is however unclear whether this habit is anything more than incidental, and also how relatively important it is in the different species of the genus. As long ago as the 19th century at least, Jean-Henri Fabre demonstrated that the species that he investigated most certainly did not depend on feathered or hairy food items, being quite able to utilise reptiles and amphibians and fishes.[13][page needed] However, there is no doubt about the use of felted fibre by various species of bees, in particular, those members of the Megachilidae that are known as carder bees build their nests mainly of plant fibre collected from arachnoid plants, though they also might add fibre from other sources, such as animal wool. The sheer amount of the material that they gather often is startling, bearing in mind that the species of bees are not at all large.[14][page needed]
Some invertebrates other than insects construct felted structures. Among those spiders are the most conspicuous. Many or most spider egg cases are partly or largely felted silk as well as woven or wound. The lids of various species of trapdoor spider burrows vary in their construction, but they are largely of earth and similar material reinforced with partly felted silk.[citation needed]
Botanical use of the term
This section needs additional citations for verification. (December 2022) |
In botanical terminology, felted typically is defined in terms such as "matted with intertwined hairs".[15] However, plants may be covered in several different ways, and several different terms have been coined to describe them. Not all textbooks use the same terms, or use them in the same way. The term felted is commonly used in describing any part of a plant covered with dense white fur, whether tangled or not. Part of the reason is that plants themselves vary so much that there seldom is much practical value to trying to be too precise; for example there is no clear boundary to separate terms such as felt(ed), arachnoid, indumentum and tomentose, and usages vary.
In botany, as opposed to mycology, felted seldom refers to internal tissues, but rather to furriness on the outside of leaves or stems. The function of the covering is always protective, sometimes against grazing or browsing animals, sometimes against wind or windblown sand, sometimes against intense sunshine or ultraviolet, and sometimes against drought and desiccation. Two illustrative examples are: Oldenburgia grandis, and Senecio haworthii. The former is a tree that grows in moderately harsh circumstances, but with a reasonable amount of seasonal rain. Its leaves are large, being broad and typically about 30 cm long. While growing to their full size they are vulnerable, so it is quite plausible that being felted protects them from browsers, ultraviolet, drought, and heat. Once their tissues have hardened and become rich in fibre and tannins, they can afford to lose their felt. In this respect they resemble many other plants whose leaves pass through vulnerable phases as they mature, though not all strategies are based on felt.
Senecio haworthii grows under far more dramatically arid conditions than Oldenburgia; its native habitat also is hotter and with a higher irradiation intensity. The plant is fairly poisonous, so it is not much browsed, though some caterpillars will eat its succulent leaves. Accordingly, its need for protection does not change much at any time of the year, and some leaves will survive for several years, retaining their felting throughout.
In Cephalocereus senilis (old man cactus) radial spines grow into a tangled coating of spectacular white hair that conceal both the green tissue and the formidable sharp central spines beneath. It is only marginally felted, but forms a powerful simultaneous protection against intense radiation, wind, frost, and herbivores of various sizes.[16][page needed] The woolly masses of fibres on such cacti have been used as stuffing for pillows and for similar applications.[17][page needed]
Mycological use of the term
Most fungal tissue is filamentous; its very nature predisposes it to grow into tangles that lend themselves to felting. Whereas vascular plants seldom have cells that grow into forms that can form massive tangles, fungi hardly can form tissues at all except by tangling and felting their hyphal filaments. Practically every mass of mushroom tissue, including cords and membranes, is formed of anastomosed and felted hyphae. The picturesque spots on the caps of Amanita muscaria consist of felted patches of remnant tissue from the volva.[18][page needed]
References
- ^ Gray, Henry (1918). Anatomy of the Human Body. Revised by Warren H. Lewis (20th ed.). Philadelphia: Lea & Febiger. Retrieved 27 December 2022.
- ^ Vogel, Steven (2000). "Chapter 5: The Stiff and the Soft". Cats' Paws And Catapults: Mechanical Worlds Of Nature And People. Penguin. ISBN 978-0140277333.
- ^ Gordon, J. E. (2003). Structures, Or Why Things Don't Fall Down. Da Capo. ISBN 978-0306812835.
- ^ Weaving, Alan; Picker, Mike; Griffiths, Charles Llewellyn (2003). Field Guide to Insects of South Africa. New Holland Publishers, Ltd. ISBN 1-86872-713-0.
- ^ Costa, James T. (2006). "Chapter 9". The Other Insect Societies. Belknap Press. ISBN 978-0674021631.
- ^ Robinson, Roy (1977). Genetics for Cat Breeders. Pergamon. ISBN 0-08-021209-3.
- ^ Feldhamer, George A. Mammalogy: Adaptation, Diversity, Ecology. The Johns Hopkins University. ISBN 978-0801886959.
- ^ Long, Charles A. The Wild Mammals of Wisconsin (Faunistica). Pensoft Publishers 2008. ISBN 978-9546423139
- ^ Jackson, Hartley H.T. et al. Mammals of Wisconsin. Publisher: University of Wisconsin 1961. ISBN 978-0299021504
- ^ Rennie, James. Natural history of birds : their architecture habits and faculties. Chapter VIII. New York : Harper 1845 May be downloaded from: https://archive.org/details/naturalhistoryof00renn
- ^ Phil Hockey; Peter Ryan; Richard Dean. Roberts Birds of Southern Africa. Publisher: John Voelcker Bird Book Fund. 2005 ISBN 9780620340533
- ^ Burton, Maurice; Burton, Robert. International Wildlife Encyclopedia. Publisher: Marshall Cavendish 2002. ISBN 978-0761472698
- ^ Fabre, Jean-Henri. Tr. Teixeira de Mattos, Alexander. The glow-worm and other beetles Publisher: New York : Dodd, Mead and Company, 1919
- ^ Fabre, Jean-Henri; Translated by Alexander Teixeira de Mattos; The Bramble-bees and others; Pub: Dodd, Mead, New York, 1915. Download from: https://archive.org/details/bramblebeesother00fabr
- ^ Jackson, Benjamin Daydon (1928). A Glossary of Botanic Terms with their Derivation and Accent (4th ed.). London: Gerald Duckworth & Co. Retrieved 27 December 2022 – via Biodiversity Heritage Library.
- ^ Mauseth, James D. Structure–Function Relationships in Highly Modified Shoots of Cactaceae. Annals of Botany 98: 901–926, 2006 doi:10.1093/aob/mcl133, available online at www.aob.oxfordjournals.org
- ^ Powell, A. Michael, Weedin, James F. Cacti of the Trans-Pecos and Adjacent Areas. Publisher: Texas Tech University Press 2004. ISBN 978-0896725317
- ^ Moore, David. Robson, Geoffrey D. Trinci, Anthony P. J. 21st Century Guidebook to Fungi. Publisher: Cambridge University Press 2011 ISBN 978-0521186957