These sea cucumbers seem to have ‘zombie’ flesh that doesn’t die when lopped off
ST. JOHN’S — A Canadian scientist has found that amputated bits of flesh cut from scarlet sea cucumbers can carry on for years in a strange new form, somewhere between life and death.
Sara Jobson is a doctoral student in the ocean sciences department at Memorial University in Newfoundland and Labrador, where she led the study that discovered what appears to be immortality of the sea cucumber’s tissue.
Jobson said she and her colleagues have spent several years observing their “little lab zombies” in what is said to be the first known case of severed tissue surviving on its own.
“Is it alive? It’s not reproducing, it’s not regrowing into (another sea cucumber), but it’s not dead,” she said in a recent interview. “It seems that they’re able to reform into a new biological unit, in a way.”

