The largest organism found on Earth can be measured using a variety of different methods. It could be defined as the largest by volume, mass, height, or length. Some creatures group together to form a superorganism, though this cannot truly be classed as one large organism and is usually only common amongst invertebrates.
There are many difficulties in truly defining the largest organism. A giant fungus of the species Armillaria ostoyae in the Malheur National Forest was found to span 8.9 km² (2200 acres). Whether or not this is an actual individual organism is disputed: some tests have indicated that they have the same genetic makeup , but this does not exclude its being a clonal colony of numerous smaller individuals. The Aspen tree, (Populus tremuloides), also forms large clonal colonies of genetically identical trees (technically, stems) connected by a single underground root system. These trees form through root sprouts coming off an original parent tree, though the root system may not remain a single unit in all specimens. One such grove covers 80 hectares and is estimated to weigh 6600 tons The largest fully-connected Aspen is Pando, and some experts call it the world's largest[http://www.olis.oecd.org/olis/2000doc.nsf/4f7adc214b91a685c12569fa005d0ee7/c125692700623b74c1256a0600551816/$FILE/JT00103743.DOC Consensus Document on the Biology of Populus, OECD (.doc file) and oldest organismQuaking Aspen by the Bryce Canyon National Park Service.
Excluding possible clonal colonies, the General Sherman tree, an individual Giant Sequoia with a volume of 1489 m3, would hold the title of the world's largest tree (by volume of its trunk). The Great Barrier Reef, the world's largest coral reef stretching 2000 km, has been shown to be a collection of many organisms and is the largest living superorganism, though the whole of the biosphere in some respects can be considered as a superorganism (see Gaia theory).
By volume and weight, the largest known animal ever to have lived is the blue whale, an endangered species that can measure 30 m (100 feet) in length and can weigh in excess of 200 tons. There is currently no conclusive evidence that a larger animal has ever existed. The largest land animals today are male Savannah Elephants, with one known example weighing around 12,000 kg (26,400 pounds), though many extinct species, such as many dinosaurs, were much larger.
The largest birds believed to be capable of flight are the now extinct members of the Teratornithidae group, with some found with wingspans of 7 meters. The largest contemporary bird capable of flight is the great albatross, with a wingspan of about 3,50 m (12 ft).
Less well described finds may even exceed this. Bruhathkayosaurus, may have weighed as much as a blue whale and have been considerably longer, and the almost mythical Amphicoelias fragillimus would have been bigger still, but Bruhathkayosaurus is based on very poor material, and Amphicoelias's only fossil was destroyed soon after discovery.
The largest flightless bird found through fossil evidence is the Dromornis stirtoni, measuring three metres tall and weighing half a tonne. Marine euryapsid reptiles (often mistakenly referred to as marine dinosaurs) outsized many present-day whales. The Leedsichthys, from the Jurassic period (165–155 million years ago), is thought to have been the largest fish to have ever lived, with estimates of some growing to 20–22 m (66–72 feet) in length. The Megalodon, a relative of the great white shark, is thought to have been the largest carnivorous fish. Flying reptiles known as pterosaurs are known to have reached a wingspan of 14 meters and believed to have grown as big as 18 meters (60 feet) *.
The largest tree by volume and mass is the Giant Sequoia (Sequoiadendron giganteum). They grow to an average height of 70–85 m (230–280 ft) and 5–7 m (16–23 ft) in diameter. Specimens have been reported to be 93.6 m (307 ft) in height and (not the same individual) 8.85 m (29 ft) in diameter; the largest individual is the General Sherman tree, with a volume of 1489 m³. Although not so large in volume, the closely related Coast Redwood (Sequoia sempervirens) is taller, reaching a maximum height of 112.83 m. See record trees for other tree records.
The Giant Sequoia is a conifer, as are the next four or five largest plant species. The largest flowering plant (angiosperm) is Eucalyptus regnans which can reach heights of 92 m *. The largest flower belongs to the species Rafflesia arnoldii, with a diameter of nearly a meter and a weight up to 11 kg. The largest unbranched inflorescence, resembling one giant flower, belongs to the Titan arum.
There are arguments that forests of trees with interconnected roots (a single organism genetically) are actually the largest organisms.
A giant marine plant, Posidonia oceanica, has been discovered in the Mediterranean Sea near the Balearic Islands, Spain. Its length is about 8 km. Although it is not proved if it is a single organism, all the samples have the same DNA. It is also thought to be the oldest living organism in the world since its estimated age is about 100,000 years.
The largest protists are kelp, which are multicellular algae that may grow past 30 metres in length. Of the groups that are not multicellular, the largest are the slime moulds, some of which cover more than 1000 square centimetres. The largest species traditionally considered protozoa are giant amoeboids like foraminiferans, a few centimetres in size.
The largest bacterium ever discovered is Thiomargarita namibiensis, which grows to 0.75 mm in diameter, making it visible to the naked eye and up to a million times the size of more typical bacteria. The largest known virus is the mimivirus, with mature particles of 400 nm in diameter (icosahedral capsid), 800,000 bases and 900 genes. Later research suggested that it could be up to 800 nm long, 1.2 Mbp and 1260 genes.
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