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OLDEST LIVING THING ON EARTH!

Scientists declare that ancient patches of a giant seagrass in the Mediterranean Sea are the oldest living organism on Earth

The scientists dated them as up to 200,000 years old.

Australian scientists sequenced the DNA of samples of the giant seagrass, Posidonia oceanic, from 40 underwater meadows in an area spanning more than 2,000 miles, from Spain to Cyprus.

The analysis, published in the journal PLos ONE, found the seagrass was between 12,000 and 200,000 years old and was most likely to be at least 100,000 years old. This is far older than the current known oldest species, a Tasmanian plant that is believed to be 43,000 years old.

Prof Carlos Duarte, from the University of Western Australia, said the seagrass has been able to reach such old age because it can reproduce asexually and generate clones of itself. Organisms that can only reproduce sexually are inevitably lost at each generation, he added.

“They are continually producing new branches,” he said.. “They spread very slowly and cover a very large area giving them more area to mine resources. They can then store nutrients within their very large branches during bad conditions for growth.”

The separate patches of seagrass in the Mediterranean span almost 10 miles and weigh more than 6,000 tons.

But Prof Duarte said that while the seagrass is one of the world’s most resilient organisms, it has begun to decline due to coastal development and global warming.

“If climate change continues, the outlook for this species is very bad,” he said.

“The seagrass in the Mediterranean is already in clear decline due to shoreline construction and declining water quality and this decline has been exacerbated by climate change. As the water warms, the organisms move slowly to higher altitudes. The Mediterranean is locked to the north by the European continent.

“They cannot move. The outlook is very bad.”

Jonathan Pearlman
Daily Telegraph

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5 thoughts on “OLDEST LIVING THING ON EARTH!”

  1. As the water gets warmer, they 'move' to higher altitudes….. huh? The higher altitudes would be warmer, so why would they go there? If they require colder, they would go deeper, or to low altitudes.

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  2. There are 6 species of nautilus remaining in our oceans that are around 500 million years old… The horseshoe crab is like 200 million years old, so how is this 200,000 yr old grass the oldest living organism? I thought the oldest living organism on our planet is a type of bacteria that has survived 2.8 billion years.

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