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Animals That Can Live Forever

No one likes the thought of growing old. Despite many human endeavors to escape or delay the process of ageing, it seems to be an inevitable part of life. But… why? Why do living things gradually fall apart when they grow older? There is a word for it: senescence.

No, it’s not the rock band who sang ‘Bring Me to Life’; senescence is the state of gradual deterioration of normal functioning.

At the cellular level, it means cells stop dividing and they eventually die. However, a few species can escape the ageing process completely.

Today we countdown 15 animals that can live forever. It’s time to put some anti-aging cream on and watch carefully if you want to live forever.

Adwaita the Aldabra Turtle

The Turtle low and steady really does win the race. Turtles and Tortoises are remarkable creatures whose lifespans are immense.

Research has shown that the organs of a century-old turtle are indistinguishable from those of a turtle that has just reached sexual maturity.

Turtles and tortoises only die as the result of predators, diseases and natural disasters. They never stop breeding and cannot die of old age.

Turtles have been known to live for centuries, and researchers have found that their organs don’t seem to break down over time.

Turtles might even be able to live indefinitely if they’re able to avoid predators and disease. In other words, they have a potential to be immortal animals.

An Aldabra giant tortoise named Adwaita was thought to be 255 years old when he died in 2006, and carbon dating of his shell confirmed that he really had been born around 1750.

And it wasn’t old age that did him in – he died of liver failure complicated by a wound brought on by a crack in his shell.

Regenerating Flatworms

These creepy crawlers, also known as planarian worms, are famous for their regeneration abilities, where a worm cut across or lengthwise can form two separate worms.
This apparently limitless regeneration also applies to aging and damaged tissue, allowing the worms to cheat death indefinitely. Flatworms have basically evolved the Time Lord method of immortality with perpetual regeneration.
Although their version of regeneration doesn’t involve changing their entire bodies all at once, they are able to restore any damaged vital organ, including their brains. These things have brains? That might even scramble their personalities a bit — assuming flatworms had personalities in the first place.
Scientists have been studying two types of planarian worms; those that reproduce sexually, like us, and those that reproduce asexually, simply dividing in two. Both appear to regenerate indefinitely by growing new muscles, skin, guts and even entire brains repeatedly.
Usually when stem cells divide – to heal wounds, or during reproduction or for growth – they start to show signs of aging. This means that the stem cells are no longer able to divide and so become less able to replace exhausted specialized cells in the tissues of our bodies.
Our aging skin is perhaps the most visible example of this effect. Planarian worms and their stem cells are somehow able to avoid the aging process and to keep their cells dividing.”

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