More DW Blogs DW.COM

The GLOBAL IDEAS Blog

Thinking for a cooler world

Search Results for Tag: mojave desert

Klaus Esterluß | Ideas

Now this is old – The Top 5 of long-living creatures

1. Tuatara
Tuatara is not only a living fossil that is around since about 200 million years. The lizards are of great interest for evolutionary studies because they have some incredible features such as a photoreceptive eye (the “third eye”), or their ability to hear, although no external ears are present. Most interesting for this list is their lifespan – Tuatara can become upto 200 years old.

Tuataras (Photo credit: wikimedia commons/public domain)

Tuataras (Photo credit: wikimedia commons/public domain)

2. Bowhead whale
Reaching an age of 200 years is nothing if you are a Bowhead whale. The oldest ever discovered was said to be 211 years old. The whale can grow upto 20 meters in length and reach a weight of 75 to 100 tonnes. As it lives in Arctic and sub-Arctic waters it‘s also known as Arctic whale.

Pair of Bowhead whales (Photo credit: wikimedia commons/public domain)

Pair of Bowhead whales (Photo credit: wikimedia commons/public domain)

3. Tortoises
Of course there are tortoises. We all know that they can become very old. They are actually considered to be the longest living vertebrates on Earth. But there are examples that scores off all the others. Harriet, a Galápagos tortoise died of heart failure at the age of 175 years in 2006. It was on the boat with Charles Darwin during his epic voyage. But maybe there‘s another record: An Aldabra giant tortoise named Adwaita is said to be died an age of 250, also in 2006.

Aldabra giant tortoise (Photo credit: CC BY 2.0) - cuatrok77, flickr.com: http://bit.ly/1cFCGea)

Aldabra giant tortoise

4. Black coral
We stay in the water for a 4th example of extremly long-living creatures. Deep down in the ocean we will find Black corals. These tree-like corals with a almost black skeleton normally occur in the tropics. Now hold your heads: In 2009 scientists released research-results on those corals. And they said that they discovered specimens of the Black coral that reached an age of around 4,265 years. One reason is that these corals grow very very slow.

Black coral colony (Photo credit: wikimedia commons / public domain)

Black coral colony (Photo credit: wikimedia commons / public domain)

5. Creosote bush
That brings us to the king of long-lasting species. It‘s a bush ring in the Mojave Desert and it has it‘s kingness written in it‘s name: King Clone, a Creosote bush ring is estimated to be 11,700 years old. That‘s like wow. Who will beat that? The battle is going on for… some other millennia.

The king of all: King Clone (Photo credit: wikimedia commons)

The king of all: King Clone (Photo credit: wikimedia commons)

 

Date

January 3, 2014

Share

Feedback

Comments deactivated