Longest Living Animal?

rkzenrage • Nov 1, 2007 7:45 pm
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/10/071028100032.htm

Longest Living Animal? Clam -- 400 Years Old -- Found In Icelandic Waters

A clam dredged from Icelandic waters had lived for 400 years - is this the longest-lived animal known to science?
Happy Monkey • Nov 1, 2007 8:32 pm
Not if it has a surviving sibling...
ferret88 • Nov 2, 2007 8:49 am
How'd they determine its age? Ask it? Check its license? Saw it in half and count the rings?
Shawnee123 • Nov 2, 2007 9:29 am
ferret88;402794 wrote:
How'd they determine its age? Ask it? Check its license? Saw it in half and count the rings?


[SIZE="4"]SCIENCE![/SIZE]
Rexmons • Nov 2, 2007 10:46 am
they cut it open and counted its rings
smurfalicious • Nov 2, 2007 2:16 pm
i hope my taco ages as well as your clam
Urbane Guerrilla • Nov 3, 2007 4:48 am
Abyssal tube worms are right up there too. Maybe nothing down there likes the taste.
DanaC • Nov 3, 2007 8:25 pm
so....we find the oldest living creature and in order to establish its longevity we kill it? that makes sense
Clodfobble • Nov 3, 2007 10:29 pm
From here:

The clam was alive when it was brought to the surface, but at that point, the researchers had no idea how old it was. Only after cutting through the shell and counting annual growth rings under a microscope did they date the mollusc to between 405 to 410 years old.

"Its death is an unfortunate aspect of this work, but we hope to derive lots of information from it," said Al Wanamaker, a postdoctoral scientist on the university's Arctica team. "For our work it's a bonus, but it wasn't good for this particular animal."


But they were killing lots that day in the name of science, not just the old ones:

The Arctica islandica clam was plucked from 80m-deep water by researchers at Bangor University in Wales, who were dredging the north Iceland shelf for the creatures. By studying their shells, the scientists hope to learn how the marine environment has changed in recent centuries.