Discovering the longest living grass in the planet

Sophie Arnaud-Haond, a scientist from the French Research Institute, and her colleagues sampled from 40 seagrass beds Posidonia oceanica on an area up to 3,500km long. They found that the genetic structure of the grass samples was identical and calculated that they existed for more than 100,000 years, Livescience reported.

Scientists estimate that a Mediterranean sea grass species has existed for more than 100,000 years, the age at which no multicellular life form on Earth has been achieved.

Sophie Arnaud-Haond, a scientist from the French Research Institute, and her colleagues sampled from 40 seagrass beds Posidonia oceanica on an area up to 3,500km long. They found that the genetic structure of the grass samples was identical and calculated that they existed for more than 100,000 years, Livescience reported.

"Posidonia oceanica grass is one of the largest age organisms on the planet," Arnaud-Haond said.

Picture 1 of Discovering the longest living grass in the planet

Sea grass Posidonia oceanica may have lived more than 100,000 years on the bottom of the Mediterranean sea.

The team thinks that Posidonia oceanica reproduces with both methods: sexual and asexual.

'That means they can reproduce by combining genes of both male and female individuals, or cloning the genome of an individual to create new plants,' Sophie explained.

The genome of asexual reproductive organism is reproduced intact over many generations, so they remain unchanged after thousands of years.

If the prediction of the age of Posidonia oceanica is proven to be true, they will top the list of the longest-lived multicellular life forms on Earth. Currently multicellular organisms live the longest as a species on Australia's Tasmanian island. It has existed for more than 43,000 years thanks to asexual reproduction method.

One theory is that cloning cannot take place forever because small mutations in the replication process will accumulate in genes over time.

'Most mutations will cause negative effects. After degeneration occurs in certain generations, the creature will disappear. So the age of clones is also limited , 'the doctor said.

But the existence of the grass samples Posidonia oceanica caused many scientists to doubt the hypothesis about the age limit of asexual reproductive organisms.

"We can demonstrate by model that Posidonia oceanica has a certain asexual reproduction mechanism that helps them avoid bad mutations ," Arnaud-Haond said.

Update 17 December 2018
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