The longest living animal on Earth can live for over 2,000 years

The longest living animal on Earth can live for over 2,000 years

IFL SCIENCE

The ocean quahog is a pretty unremarkable-looking clam, reaching around 5 centimeters (2 inches) in size, and yet it can take them over 200 years to get there. The oldest on record was 507 years old, topping the Greenland shark, and yet it still only makes it the oldest known non-colonial animal.

“Animals living longer than 500 years?!” I hear you cry? Yes siree Bob. Let’s take a look at some of Earth’s oldest animals.

 A sponge the size of a minivan

Scientists discovered the largest sponge on record 2,133 meters (7,000 feet) below the sea’s surface in 2015 near the Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument off Hawaii. Colonial organisms like this behemoth are slow-growing, meaning they must be very old to reach enormous sizes. This record-breaking sponge was 3.7 by 2.1 meters (12 by 7 feet), and while its exact age isn’t confirmed, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration report that sponges can live for over 2,300 years.

The ”immortal” jellyfish

Another small organism with a curious affinity for living is the immortal jellyfishTurritopsis dohrnii, which is a little bit smaller than a pinky nail and pictured at the top of this article. As their name suggests, their party trick isn’t so much living to a great age as it is simply refusing to die.

When immortal jellyfish are injured or starved, they fall to the seabed and start to decay. However, rather than dying in the traditional sense, their cells reaggregate to create polyps (the earliest life stage of jellyfish). This renders them “biologically immortal”, but T. dohrnii does not live forever as there’s no coming back when you’ve been eaten.

An unhappy clam

Ming the quahog clam saw some things in its time. It lived through the Renaissance, the Industrial Revolution, and the Internet Age. It bore witness to countless wars and bloody revolutions, watching empires rise and fall. And yet, through 507 years of drama, the thing that killed it was a *checks notes* freezer.

Yes, Ming the quahog clamArctica islandica, only died after it was frozen for collection by researchers. It’s not an uncommon cause of death for these clams that are routinely captured and killed for commercial consumption, but it raises interesting questions about how many more years of passively observing the dissolution of man Ming might’ve had left in ‘em.

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