My primary sources are a BBC article, BBC News “World's oldest known tortoise still alive, as reports of death revealed as hoax”, and a USA Today article, “Jonathan, world’s oldest tortoise, is alive despite viral death rumor”. Both sources clearly state that reports of Jonathan’s death were just misinformation being spread online.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c393xmpzjwko
(https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/world/2026/04/01/jonathan-oldest-tortoise-dies-st-helena/89424376007/)
The BBC reports that officials from Saint Helena confirmed Jonathan is still alive today, this contradicts the social media claims. Similarly, USA Today explains that the false claim likely spread through unverified posts, and not from any official announcement. Both sources rely on statements from credible authorities on the island, making them strong secondary sources.
The second claim is that Jonathan “lived through two world wars.” This is true. Jonathan is estimated to have been born around 1832, so he would’ve lived through World War I and World War II.
Finally, the claim that Jonathan “was gay” can be misleading. Jonathan has lived with other tortoises, including one named Frederic, who was thought to be a female but was later determined to be a male. Because Jonathan had shown mating behavior with male tortoises, some media outlets jokingly described him as “gay.” However, applying human sexual identity labels to animals is not scientifically precise.
The initial claim originated from viral posts by Dextero on bsky.app, which was a vague claim with no evidence supporting it. As reported by BBC News, the officials at Saint Helena confirmed that Jonathan was alive, which means that his death was never officially stated.