The Los Angeles Post
U.S. World Business Lifestyle
Today: April 16, 2025
Today: April 16, 2025

An elusive creature of the deep can live for centuries. Scientists think they know why

An elusive creature of the deep can live for centuries. Scientists think they know why
December 14, 2024

(CNN) โ€” โ€œEven though you want to try to, never grow up,โ€ Peter Pan said in the titular novel by J.M. Barrie, echoing a sentiment long expressed by the human race in an effort to cheat death.

The quest to unlock the secrets of longevity has been the topic of scientific study for decades. And some of the greatest lessons about living a long life come from nature itself.

Take Jonathan the giant tortoise, for instance. It is believed that the tortoise, a resident of the remote South Atlantic island of St. Helena, was likely born in 1832 โ€” but he may be more than 200 years old since the exact date of his birth remains unknown.

An elusive creature of the deep can live for centuries. Scientists think they know why
A monarch butterfly drinks nectar from a flower in the pollinator habitat bed near the Chicago Park District storehouse in August.

Although blind and lacking a sense of smell, Jonathan still has sharp hearing for his advanced age and sunbathes during mild weather.

But even though giant tortoises are known for their exceptionally long lives, they may be outranked by an elusive creature of the deep.

Ocean secrets

The rarely seen Greenland shark is a sluggish creature, slowly swimming through the deep waters of the North Atlantic and Arctic oceans. The polar fish is the only species of shark that can withstand the freezing temperatures year-round.

The large sharks also live to be more than 400 years old, and some of them may have been alive since colonial times.

After mapping and studying their extraordinary genomes, scientists think the sharksโ€™ unusually long lifespans are rooted in their unique genetic makeup โ€” with insights that could be used to extend human lifespans.

Other worlds

The โ€œBlack Beautyโ€ meteorite opened a window into studying ancient Mars when it was found in the Sahara Desert in 2011.

Astronomers believe the space rock was ejected from the Martian surface 5 million to 10 million years ago. And now, a single mineral grain inside the meteorite has revealed the oldest direct evidence of water on Mars 4.45 billion years ago.

The mineral grain was altered by hot water on Mars, which suggests that habitable environments such as hot springs may have existed on the red planet early in its history.

Meanwhile, the Perseverance rover just completed its 3 ยฝ-month ascent up the steep rim of Jezero Crater on Mars, spotting an unusual zebra-striped rock along the way. Next up? The robotic explorer will investigate the oldest rocks on Mars to uncover more about the planetโ€™s mysterious past.

Wild kingdom

With distinctive orange-and-black wings, monarch butterflies are easy to spot as they flit among the flowers, helping pollinate plants and encouraging biodiversity.

But monarch populations have seen a steep decline due to insecticides, habitat loss and the climate crisis โ€” troubling enough that the US Fish and Wildlife Service has proposed adding the fragile species to the threatened species list.

If the butterflies receive the designation, more action could be taken to protect the important pollinators. But officials warn that without action, monarchs could vanish before the end of the century with far-reaching consequences for ecosystems.

Fantastic creatures

When a creature washed ashore in New Zealand in July, experts wondered whether it might be a spade-toothed whale, the worldโ€™s rarest whale thatโ€™s considered to be almost mythical because it has never been seen alive at sea.

Now, scientists studying the remains have confirmed the โ€œreally stocky, powerful-looking little animalโ€ is indeed one of the elusive marine mammals, said Anton van Helden, an expert on some of the worldโ€™s rarest whales.

The carcass, studied by whale scientists and members of the local Mฤori community, yielded precious clues about the deep-sea-diving animal.

We are family

Ancient DNA retrieved from bone fragments found in a cave beneath a medieval castle have helped scientists pinpoint when prehistoric humans encountered Neanderthals and made babies with them.

The bones belonged to a mother, daughter and distant cousins who lived in whatโ€™s now eastern Germany about 45,000 years ago. Their genomes revealed evidence of Neanderthal ancestry, meaning that early Homo sapiens living in the region mated with Neanderthals 1,500 years earlier.

โ€œWe were far more similar than we were different,โ€ said Priya Moorjani, assistant professor of molecular and cell biology at the University of California, Berkeley.

โ€œThey seem to have mixed with each other for a long period of time.โ€

In addition to shedding light on the shared history between humans and Neanderthals, the study also showed that the fragments belonged to a lost branch of the human family tree.

Discoveries

Explore these fascinating new findings:

โ€” A male humpback whale embarked on a record-breaking migration spanning 8,106 miles (13,046 kilometers) between the Pacific and Indian oceans, offering unique insight into the complex behaviors of these marine giants.

โ€” A type of hardy bacteria, nicknamed โ€œConan the Bacterium,โ€ is resistant to doses of radiation thousands of times stronger than what would kill a human. Now, scientists have figured out its โ€œsecret sauce,โ€ which could be used to protect deep-space astronauts in the future.

โ€” The NASA Juno spacecraftโ€™s flybys of Jupiterโ€™s fiery moon Io helped reveal the surprising reasons behind why itโ€™s the most volcanic world in our solar system.

The-CNN-Wire
โ„ข & ยฉ 2024 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

Related Articles

US farmers sue Trump administration for withheld IRA funds Budget cuts impact national parks: What visitors need to know See 'guitar shark' discovered by scientists during expedition Ski instructor Nancy Lierman, 90, celebrates milestone birthday with family on slopes
Share This

Popular

Australia|Environment|Health|Science|World

Salmon migration affected by drug pollution in water from antianxiety medication

Salmon migration affected by drug pollution in water from antianxiety medication
Business|Environment|Political|US

Burning coal leaves dangerous waste. Trump's EPA eyes looser rules for handling it

Burning coal leaves dangerous waste. Trump's EPA eyes looser rules for handling it
Environment|Science|Technology|US

Miami researchers are testing a textured seawall designed to hold back water and create a home for marine organisms

Miami researchers are testing a textured seawall designed to hold back water and create a home for marine organisms
Education|Environment|Science

Wide variety of old-growth ecosystems across the US makes their conservation a complex challenge

Wide variety of old-growth ecosystems across the US makes their conservation a complex challenge

Health

Education|Health|Lifestyle|US

Chicago area woman with disabilities keeps getting denied options for housing

Chicago area woman with disabilities keeps getting denied options for housing
Health|Science

Want to reduce your dementia risk? A shingles vaccine could help

Want to reduce your dementia risk? A shingles vaccine could help
Business|Economy|Health|Political|US

Trumpโ€™s tariffs could make it harder to get certain generic drugs

Trumpโ€™s tariffs could make it harder to get certain generic drugs
Food|Health|US

Baby food makers are failing Californiaโ€™s lead standards, Reuters review shows

Baby food makers are failing Californiaโ€™s lead standards, Reuters review shows

Access this article for free.

Already have an account? Sign In