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The Earth's only imortal animal


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The turritopsis nutricula species of jellyfish may be the only animal in the world to have truly discovered the fountain of youth.

 

Since it is capable of cycling from a mature adult stage to an immature polyp stage and back again, there may be no natural limit to its life span. Scientists say the hydrozoan jellyfish is the only known animal that can repeatedly turn back the hands of time and revert to its polyp state (its first stage of life).

 

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Genetics scientists will want to make some serum for limitless lifespans. :rolleyes:

How do you know there isn't a serum like this today and we are just not sharing it with you? :xp:

He's a jellyfish, who cares?
You mean besides the scientific community studying them?
Because they are able to bypass death, the number of individuals is spiking. They're now found in oceans around the globe rather than just in their native Caribbean waters. "We are looking at a worldwide silent invasion," says Dr. Maria Miglietta of the Smithsonian Tropical Marine Institute.[/Quote]

 

 

I am Conner McJellyfish of the clan Turritopsis Nutricula. I was born in 1518 in the Caribbean off the shores of Cuba. And I am immortal.

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"Turritopsis nutricula: She was there when you were born and she will be there when you die"....sounds like a bad horror movie lol

 

As for the quote in the main article saying that "they're now found in oceans around the globe rather than just in their native Caribbean waters", it might no be due to their so-called "immortality" (if not cut into pieces) but articles say they're about 5mm in size) but to maritime transport: when ships fill up their ballast tanks at one location they can easily "swallow-in " several of these medusae and then empty everything (including mimartin) at another remote location. This is just an uninformed guess..mimartin certainly knows better... :xp:

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Wouldn't the obvious problem with this be genetic diversity? Sure with a jellyfish, that's not a big deal, but in the case of people, if you had a million people spreading the SAME genes for a million years, it would seriously stunt evolution and diversity.

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Wouldn't the obvious problem with this be genetic diversity? Sure with a jellyfish, that's not a big deal, but in the case of people, if you had a million people spreading the SAME genes for a million years, it would seriously stunt evolution and diversity.

Medical science has rendered a good deal of natural selection null and void in the West, anyway.

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