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Life

Extreme survival: Meet the immortals

By Caroline Williams

10 November 2010

91av. Science news and long reads from expert journalists, covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on the website and the magazine.

The immortal jellyfish reverts to a juvenile stage when starved

(Image: Stefano Piraino/Barcroft Media)

Read more: Extreme survival: The toughest life forms on Earth

Death has no sting for the jellyfish that has no age, and it’s a remote prospect for a lot of other organisms too

Of all the limitations on Earth there is one that no life can escape: death. But some living things manage to outsmart their fate for longer than others.

For reasons that aren’t well understood, animals rarely make it to their 100th birthday. But, as ever, there are exceptions. The oldest living animal yet discovered is a marine clam of the species Arctica islandica caught off the coast of Iceland. According to some estimates, this individual, which has been named Ming, is around 400 years old. But as-yet-unpublished research led by Paul Butler, an animal growth specialist at Bangor University, UK, suggests it may be older still.

No one knows how these clams manage to live so much longer than other animals. What is known is that at some point in their lifespan, their , making it far from certain whether they experience ageing in the sense that we know it.

“As the clams get older their death rate drops, so they may not even experience ageing as we know it”

Plants get around the ageing problem by allowing the cells in the oldest parts of the organism to die while continuing to produce new sections. The most extreme examples are so-called clonal trees, which reproduce by sprouting genetically identical colonies over vast areas, all sharing the same root system. A…

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