The Greenland shark is currently the longest-living vertebrate known on Earth, according to scientists.
Image Credit: Diving Magazine
The ages of 28 Greenland sharks were determined using radiocarbon dating of eye proteins, revealing that a female shark was estimated to be about 400 years old. This makes it the longest known vertebrate on Earth, surpassing the previous record holder, a bowhead whale estimated to be 211 years old.
As Julius Nielsen, a marine biologist at the University of Copenhagen and lead author of the study, put it: “We had our expectations that we were dealing with an unusual animal, but I think everyone who did this research was very surprised to learn that sharks were so old like them.”
Greenland sharks swim through the cold waters of the Arctic and North Atlantic at such a slow pace that it has earned them the nickname “sleeper sharks.” Image Credit: Julius Nielsen
Greenland sharks are huge creatures, capable of reaching up to 5m in length, but they grow at a slow rate of just 1cm per year. They can be found, swimming slowly, in the cold depths of the North Atlantic.
According to the research team, these animals only reach sexual maturity when they reach 4 m in length, which, based on their estimated age range of up to 400 years, would not occur until they are approximately 150 years old.
A newly tagged Greenland shark returns to the deep, cold waters of the Uummannaq Fjord in western Greenland. Image Credit: Julius Nielsen
The study was based in part on radiocarbon levels in the eye tissue of sharks, made possible by the large amounts of radiocarbon released into the ocean during atmospheric thermonuclear weapon tests in the 1960s. It was determined that sharks with the highest levels of radiocarbon in eye tissue were less than 50 years old, while those with the lowest levels were estimated to be at least 50 years old or older.
The researchers then came up with an estimated age range for the oldest sharks based on their size and previous data on the size of Greenland sharks at birth and the growth rates of the fish.
A Greenland shark swims near the ocean surface after being released from the research vessel Sanna in northern Greenland. Image Credit: Julius Nielsen
According to Nielsen, the analysis has a probability rate of around 95 percent and determined that the sharks were at least 272 years old, but could be up to 512 years old (!), with the most likely age being 390 years.
But why do Greenland sharks live so long?
The long lifespan of these animals is attributed to their extremely slow metabolism and the cold waters they inhabit. They move through the waters of the Arctic and North Atlantic at a very slow pace, earning them the nickname “sleeper sharks.” Despite having been found with seal parts in their stomachs, the sharks are so slow that experts believe they must have eaten the seals while they were asleep or already dead.
The slower you go, the further you will go.