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  2. Tuatara - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuatara

    The average lifespan is about 60 years, but they can live to be well over 100 years old; [9] tuatara could be the reptile with the second longest lifespan after tortoises. [citation needed] Some experts believe that captive tuatara could live as long as 200 years. [100] This may be related to genes that offer protection against reactive oxygen ...

  3. Why the Tuatara Has Three Eyes - AOL

    www.aol.com/why-tuatara-three-eyes-064600553.html

    They live incredibly long lives. On average, the tuatara lives for 60 years, but it can live to be older than 100. The oldest known living tuatara is Henry, a 130-year-old member of his species ...

  4. List of longest-living organisms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_longest-living...

    The tuatara, a lizard-like reptile native to New Zealand, can live well over 100 years. Henry, a tuatara at the Southland Museum in New Zealand, mated for the first time at the estimated age of 111 years in 2009 with an 80-year-old female and fathered 11 baby tuatara. [113]

  5. Talk:Tuatara - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Tuatara

    They can maintain normal activities at temperatures as low as 7° C, but prefer temperatures of 16–21° C, the lowest optimal body temperature of any reptile; temperatures over 28° C are generally fatal. This sentence is too long and segmented, but I cannot find a way to fix it.

  6. Underwater octopus city discovered by biologists

    www.aol.com/news/2017-09-20-underwater-octopus...

    Referred to as Octlantis, the underwater town off Australia's coast hosts members of the Octopus tetricus species, commonly known as the gloomy octopus.

  7. Archaeocroton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archaeocroton

    Adult tuatara ticks are nearly circular, light brown and 2 millimetres (0.079 in) long. [3] They were first described by Lionel Jack Dumbleton in 1943. [4] The holotype male specimen was collected from Stephens Island by E. J. Tillyard in January 1922 and later deposited in the New Zealand Arthropod Collection.

  8. Wētā - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wētā

    Wētā is a loanword, from the Māori-language word wētā, which refers to this whole group of large insects; some types of wētā have a specific Māori name. [2] In New Zealand English, it is spelled either "weta" or "wētā", although the form with macrons is increasingly common in formal writing, as the Māori word weta (without macrons) instead means "filth or excrement". [3]

  9. Taniwha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taniwha

    In inland waters, they may still be of whale-like dimensions, but look more like a gecko or a tuatara, having a row of spines along the back. Other taniwha appear as a floating log, which behaves in a disconcerting way (Orbell 1998:149–150, Reed 1963:297). Some can tunnel through the earth, uprooting trees in the process.