Longevity Stats
My maternal grandfather lived to 103 and my father lived to 98. Both were healthy throughout their lives. I’m hoping I’ve inherited their durable genes, even though I’ve not lived as common-sensibly as they did.
The oldest known human was Jeanne Louise Calmet, who made it to 122 with only nineteenth- and early twentieth-century medical care available (1875-1997).
Other earth’s fauna live lives of widely varying longevity. That last lobster you savored might have been 100, but that’s nothing compared with an Ocean quahog clam, which could be over 500 years old before it’s served up on your plate. If you prefer Mahi-mahi (Common dolphinfish), it cannot have lived more than 4 years when caught and grilled. Pink salmon live only 3 years, while a rougheye rockfish can live 205 years.
The shortest-lived vertebrate on our planet is the Pygmy goby fish, at eight weeks. Waaaay over at the other end of the longevity spectrum is the Immortal jellyfish, which can reverse its life cycle back to a polyp over and over. The life of a single Hexactinellid sponge can date back an incredible 15,000 years, to a time when the earliest people arrived in North America.
    Here’s
a selection of other creatures’ life spans:
         
House mouse 4 yrs
         
Mountain cottontail rabbit 7.4 yrs
         
Red squirrel 9.8 yrs
         
Buff-bellied hummingbird 11 yrs
         
Guinea pig 12 yrs
         
Common quail and Giant armadillo 15 yrs
         
Domestic cattle, American crow, and Giant manta ray 20 yrs
         
Red fox and Cheetah 21 yrs
         
Tiger and Blue jay 26 yrs
         
Domestic dog and King penguin 27 yrs
         
Domestic cat 30 yrs
         
Panda 37 yrs
         
Gray heron 38 yrs
      
   Giraffe and Whooping crane 40
yrs
         
Great white shark 50 yrs
         
Bottlenose dolphin 52 yrs
         
Gorilla 60 yrs
         
Chimpanzee 68 yrs
         
American alligator 77 yrs
         
Asian elephant 80 yrs
         
Killer whale 90 yrs
         
Blue whale 110 yrs
         
Eastern box turtle 138 yrs
         
Aldabra tortoise 175 yrs
         
Bowhead whale 211 yrs
Greenland shark 392 yrs
All the creatures on the above list survive with no medical help whatsoever. No procedures, therapies, dieting, yoga, psychological counselling, gym memberships, supplements, or pills, yet the last five of them far outlive any of us. But, on the other hand or paw or flipper, none of them consume double bacon cheeseburgers or fries or Twinkies or loaded pizzas or alcohol or nicotine or soft drinks. And they get plenty of daily exercise.
Maybe we’ve a few lessons to learn from them.
Phil
Source: National Geographic
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