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author | elprutest |
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permlink | fkpd8tbdx |
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<a href="https://musing.io/q/elprutest/fkpd8tbdx">View this answer on Musing.io</a>
author | pabloseyi |
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permlink | p39p54b85 |
category | musing-threads |
json_metadata | "{"app":"Musing","appTags":["animal","question"],"appCategory":"animal","appTitle":"Is it true that jellyfish are immortal?","appBody":"<p>Not all jellyfish are actually immortal, Be that as it may, there is one species which has been regarded \"organically unfading:\" </p><p>This is the Turritopsis dorhnii. In any case, for this creature, \"everlasting status\" is somewhat confounded. </p><p>Like most other jellyfish, the Turritopsis starts its life as a free-swimming hatchling called a \"planula.\" Once the planula achieves a specific point in its advancement, it will discover a spot to grapple to build up a polyp state (like their cousins, the coral). It is now when the similitudes among Turritopsis and most other jellyfish end, as this new state at that point starts to develop medusae, which bud and split away to start their free-swimming jellyfish lives. </p><p>Once the medusae achieve sexual development, they move toward becoming predators, encouraging most normally on different types of jellyfish. Be that as it may, if the grown-up Turritopsis is assaulted, presented to natural change, or ends up wiped out, it can return to an explicitly youthful planula to restore a polyp province somewhere else.</p>","appDepth":2,"appParentPermlink":"fkpd8tbdx","appParentAuthor":"elprutest","musingAppId":"aU2p3C3a8N","musingAppVersion":"1.1","musingPostType":"answer"}" |
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author | paulanii |
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permlink | f3kwa7m85 |
category | musing-threads |
json_metadata | "{"app":"Musing","appTags":["animal","question"],"appCategory":"animal","appTitle":"Is it true that jellyfish are immortal?","appBody":"<p>No, they are not.</p><p>Although scientists have discovered a jelly fish which displays traits likened to immortality. </p><p>Turritopsis dohrnii, the immortal jellyfish, is a species of jelly fish which has been discovered in the Mediterranean sea and the coast of Japan. It is one of thr few creatures found to be capable of reaching sexual maturity and reverting back to its immature stage as a solidarity individual.</p><p>When the turritopsis dohrnii matures and has undergone the stages of growth which begins as a polyps, and has reached sexual maturity they are known to prey on other jellyfish at a rapid pace. When exposed to stress or pressure, sickness or old age, instead of dying, they opt out of this normal way of life. It has the capability to revert back to its polyps stage and forms a new colony. </p><p>This process is a marvel and is known as transdifferetiation, a cell development process that changes the differentiated state of the cells and turns them into new cells. </p><p>Now, in theory, this process can go on indefinitely, thus rendering the creature biologically immortal but csn still die. Typically, in nature, these creatures generally succumb to disease in their medusa stage and do not revert back to the polyp stage so they die. </p><p>Finally, this phenomena has only been observed in a laboratory and not in its natural habitat. </p>","appDepth":2,"appParentPermlink":"fkpd8tbdx","appParentAuthor":"elprutest","musingAppId":"aU2p3C3a8N","musingAppVersion":"1.1","musingPostType":"answer"}" |
created | 2018-10-19 02:39:03 |
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author | valth |
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permlink | fk88zebd5 |
category | musing-threads |
json_metadata | "{"app":"Musing","appTags":["animal","question"],"appCategory":"animal","appTitle":"Is it true that jellyfish are immortal?","appBody":"<p>It depends on how you define immortality. As @paulanii has already said, there are some species of jellyfish that has the ability to revert from their adult life form back into polyps (and subsequently hydra and then medusa) again if they are injured or something like that. </p>\n<p>Once the medusa life form reverts back to a poly, its cells are transformed, and the process can remind you of stem cells in humans and other mammals. Once it is a polyp, it's time to challenge your definition of an individual, because at this stage the jellyfish will create hundreds of polyps, all genetically identical, so they are technically the same individual. Theoretically all of these can grown to become adult jellyfish, and all of them are still considered a single individual due to their 100 % identic DNA. </p>\n<p>So do you consider this animal to be immortal? Some do, others don't. The big argument against it is that it's not really able to live forever, it's more like it's reverting back to a fetus-like stage and re-develops for yet another cycle. </p>\n<p><br></p>","appDepth":2,"appParentPermlink":"fkpd8tbdx","appParentAuthor":"elprutest","musingAppId":"aU2p3C3a8N","musingAppVersion":"1.1","musingPostType":"answer"}" |
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