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Amazing rare salamander hasn’t moved from same spot in 7 years

This salamander is a real sloth.

A rare cave olm has been standing completely still in the same spot for more than seven years, surprising scientists in a new study.

The bizarrely chilled-out creature — which is roughly a foot-long and can live more than 100 years — hasn’t budged from its relaxing spot on a rock in Bosnia Herzegovinian for least 2,569 days, according to New Scientist.

Minimal movement isn’t unusual for the creaturese, according to the study published in the Journal of Zoology, which found the sedentary slimers generally move less than 30 feet over the course of a decade.

However, the scientists were startled to discover that one of the salamanders they were following hadn’t so much as lifted a single one of its three fingers since the Obama administration.

The research monitored the movement of 19 olms in Herzegovinian caves over an eight-year period.

“They are hanging around, doing almost nothing,” lead researcher Gergely Balázs, of the  Eötvös Loránd University in Budapest in Hungary, told New Scientist.

The amphibians are generally only motivated to move in order to find a mate, which they do roughly once every 12 years. They are blind, have no predators, and are able to go without food for several years, according to Newsweek.

Balázs and his diving team used a “capture-mark-recapture” technique to keep tabs on the creatures’ movements.