Oldest Animals on Earth

Deep Sea Sponges // 2300-18,000 years A species of deep sea glass sponge (Monorhaphis chuni) produces an extremely long spicule, or skeletal structure, made of silica, with the sponge part on the top. It looks a bit like an artsy floor lamp. Much like tree rings, the layers of silica record climate fluctuations as well as the age of the animal. A 2017 study of ocean composition over time that included M. chuni spicules estimated they were between 5000 and 18,000 years old. In 2008, another study looking at the growth rate of the giant barrel sponge (Xestospongia muta) estimated they can live more than 2300 years.

Greenland Shark // 400-500 years Though they’re slow-moving and usually blinded by eye parasites, Greenland sharks (Somniosus microcephalus) are still one of the top predators in the Arctic and the world’s longest-lived vertebrates. A 2016 study on a 16-foot Greenland shark, which was caught in fishing nets as bycatch, used a new technique to date the animal. By radiocarbon-dating a protein inside their eyes, which forms before birth and remains viable throughout their lives, scientists estimated the specimen was about 392 years old, give or take 120 years. That suggests the sharks can live between 272 and 512 years.

Ocean Quahog // 200-500 years These cold-water clams (Arctica islandica) often live well over 200 years. The oldest known individual was a mature 507-year-old named Ming the Mollusk, collected by research scientists from the Icelandic shelf in 2006. Age in quahogs is determined by counting the lines on the shell, some of which are extremely fine, and Ming’s true age was not determined until 2013 by researchers at Bangor University in the UK. The animal would have born in 1499, at the time of the Ming Dynasty, hence its nickname.

Bowhead Whale // 200 years Analyzing stone harpoon tips found in the blubber of bowhead whales (Balaena mysticetus) is one of the ways scientists have determined they can live up to two centuries. Biologists working with Native whalers in northern Alaska have found embedded harpoon points that are estimated to date from the 1890s. Scientists have also analyzed eye tissue from a group of bowhead whales and concluded that one of the animals was 211 years old at the time of its death. Bowheads, named for the high bow-like curve of their mouth, are one of 14 species of baleen whales and the only one that lives in the Arctic year-round.

Rockfish // 100-200 years Some species in the genus Sebastes live to be 100 to 200 years old (if they don’t end up on someone’s plate first.) Rockfish don’t start reproducing until they’re around 25 years old; their late blooming and slow growth make them vulnerable to overfishing.

Red Sea Urchin // 100-200 years Red sea urchins (Strongylocentrotus franciscanus) resemble living Koosh balls, eat mostly kelp, and never make a big deal of how great they look for their age. They can live for as long as 200 years and, aside from growing a bit more each year, show no signs of aging—they even maintain their reproductive abilities. They may die by getting eaten, fished, or a specific disease, but very rarely (if at all) from old age.

Aldabra Giant Tortoise // 189 years and counting If this list noted the most famous long-lived animals, Aldabra giant tortoises (Aldabrachelys gigantea) would surely be on top. On the island of St. Helena in the southern Atlantic Ocean, a Seychelles giant tortoise (a subspecies of the Aldabra) named Jonathan currently holds the Guinness World Record as the oldest land animal at 189 years old and counting. Jonathan was born in 1832, when Charles Darwin still three years away from arriving in the Galápagos.

Oldest Animals on Earth