Oldest tropical reef fish ever recorded is an 81-year-old midnight snapper
id="article-body" class="row" section="article-body">
A midnight snapper wowed scientists by logging 81 years in the water.
AIMS/Brett Taylor
Scientists are learning more about the secret -- and Aquaristik surprisingly long -- lives of tropical reef fish. An 81-year-old midnight snapper found off the coast of Western Australia has rewritten the record books.
"Until now, the oldest fish that we've found in shallow, tropical waters have been around 60 years old," on Tuesday. "We've identified two different species here that are becoming octogenarians, and probably older."
Taylor led a this month. The paper covered red bass, midnight snapper and black and white snapper. The researchers found 11 fish that were more than six decades old. A 79-year-old red bass was discovered in the same area as the record-setting snapper.
Determining the age of a fish is a lot like calculating the age of a tree. Fish ear bones (otoliths) have growth bands that let scientists dial in an accurate age. The bad news is that this method requires killing the fish. At least the snapper had a good run. "It's just incredible for a fish to live on a coral reef for 80 years," Taylor said.
The researchers hope the study will help with fish management decisions during a time of climate change. "We're observing fish at different latitudes -- with varying water temperatures -- to better understand how they might react when temperatures warm everywhere," said Taylor.
The midnight snapper joins a short list of impressively aged marine animals. The before his death in 2017. Granddad was the world's oldest aquarium fish at the time. Researchers announced the discovery of in 2016.
This gives our pet goldfish something to aspire to.