Aging research seeks to determine the processes that cause degeneration and disease in aged organisms, and to discover ways to prevent and/or slow their progression. Previous studies have shown that aging can be slowed in several model organisms through various means; however much is still not understood. In the model organism Caenorhabditis elegans, previous work shows that decreasing oxygen levels (hypoxia) significantly increases lifespan. The hypoxia-induced lifespan increase is observed when worms are exposed to hypoxia either from a late larval stage for life or if they are deprived of oxygen for just one day at the same larval stage. The low oxygen environment activates the hypoxic response pathway, mediated by the hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF-1). Previous data show that an increase of the HIF-1 protein, via genetic mutation or alterations in atmospheric oxygen, is sufficient to extend lifespan. However, much about this pathway remains unknown, including the mechanism for increased longevity, the difference between genetic and environmental manipulations of HIF-1, and the downstream proteins involved. My project examines the genetic components responsible for extending lifespan in hypoxia. To test this, we measured whether hypoxia increases the lifespans of worm strains with deletions or transgenic overexpression of known aging genes. Our results suggest that disruption of most of the non-HIF-1-related pathways have no effect on hypoxia-induced lifespan extension. However, the data show that the forkhead transcription factor, DAF-16, is required for hypoxia to increase lifespan, and subsequent work has shown that hypoxia causes DAF-16 to enter the nucleus. Interestingly, results indicate that hypoxia decreases lifespan when the oxidative stress response factor, SKN-1, is overexpressed, suggesting that SKN-1 is somehow toxic to worms in low oxygen. Collectively, the results show that hypoxic treatment increases lifespan in worms, but that the hypoxic pathway is intertwined with other stress responsive pathways.