List of long-living organisms

This is a list of the oldest individual lifeforms. This is usually defined as:

Contents

Biological immortality

If the mortality rate of a species does not increase after maturity, the species does not age and is said to be biologically immortal. There are many examples of plants and animals for which the mortality rate actually decreases with age, for all or part of the life cycle. Coral colonies and aspen trees are the clearest examples. Some large trees may routinely grow in size for decades, while their mortality rates decrease. Some sources say that sharks, too, grow larger in size while their mortality rate decreases, for long periods of their lives.

If the mortality rate remains constant, the rate determines the mean lifespan. The lifespan can be long or short, even though the species technically "does not age". There are many examples of species for which scientists have not detected an increase in mortality rate after maturity. An alternative explanation for this phenomenon may be that the mean lifespan of the species is so long that the modern scientific study of longevity and senescence has not yet matured enough itself to measure longevity in the species.

There are stranger examples of species that have been observed to regress to a larval state and regrow into adults multiple times:

Revived into activity after stasis

Clonal plant colonies

As with all long-lived plant and fungal species, no individual part of a clonal colony is alive (in the sense of active metabolism) for more than a very small fraction of the life of the entire clone. Some clonal colonies may be fully connected via their root systems, while most are not actually interconnected, but are genetically identical clones which populated an area through vegetative reproduction. Ages for clonal colonies, often based on current growth rates, are estimates.[8]

Individual plant specimens

Animals

See also

References

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