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Idan (not verified) says:

"Still, they are to date the only known animal capable of reverting to an earlier, immature stage"

are they not counting men as animals?

Tony (not verified) says:

Cool creature, dumb article.
Immortal means something isn't subject to death, not something isn't subject to aging. Even on aging, it didn't say they could do this development cycle loop an infinite amount of times, so even that isn't right. Worse, most of them apparently die before they even get to the mature stage, yet alone the rate of one being able to survive through even 6-7 stages (3-4 loops).

Far from immortal, very close to cool though.

Isaac (not verified) says:

Sarcasm aside, it's an interesting find. It would be nice to see a picture of one of these critters in mid-transformation back to polyp stage.

Greg (not verified) says:

The diagram at the end seems to be mislabeled. A tuatara is a lizard, not a jellyfish.

Paul (not verified) says:

It looks like a metroid

Nike (not verified) says:

i have waiting for this animal