Science | Europe
Old Canned Salmon Just Became the Most Valuable Archive in Ocean Science — Here Is Why
Scientists used old canned salmon from museum collections to track a century of ocean health changes. The findings are shocking — and deeply relevant to ocean conservation.
Scientists used old canned salmon from museum collections to track a century of ocean health changes. The findings are shocking — and deeply relevant to ocean conservation.
- Scientists used old canned salmon from museum collections to track a century of ocean health changes.
- The research idea that produced one of April 2026's most unexpected scientific findings began with a question that sounds almost absurdly mundane: what if old cans of salmon from museum collections could tell us somethin...
- The answer, it turns out, is yes — and the specific information they contain is both scientifically valuable and ecologically alarming.
Scientists used old canned salmon from museum collections to track a century of ocean health changes.
The research idea that produced one of April 2026's most unexpected scientific findings began with a question that sounds almost absurdly mundane: what if old cans of salmon from museum collections could tell us something meaningful about ocean ecosystem health over the past century?
The answer, it turns out, is yes — and the specific information they contain is both scientifically valuable and ecologically alarming. Researchers from the University of Washington and several museum natural history collections analysed the tissue of salmon from canned specimens dating back to the early 1900s, measuring the prevalence and abundance of parasitic worms known as anisakid nematodes — tiny roundworms that are transmitted through the marine food web, from krill to small fish to salmon to marine mammals.
Parasite abundance in marine ecosystems is, counterintuitively, an indicator of ecosystem health rather than degradation. Healthy, biodiverse marine food webs support robust parasite populations because parasites require multiple host species across trophic levels to complete their life cycles. Simplified, degraded food webs support fewer parasite species and lower parasite abundances because the intermediate host diversity they need isn't there.
The canned salmon data showed a significant increase in anisakid worm abundance in Pacific salmon over the century of the sample collection. This is apparently good news — a healthier, more complete food web producing more parasites — but the picture is complicated by geographic variation. The species that showed increasing parasites are those associated with regions where krill populations have remained robust and marine mammal populations have recovered following hunting protections. The species from heavily fished or degraded regions showed different patterns, consistent with the ecosystem health indicator story.
The methodological contribution may be as important as the finding itself: museum collections of preserved food products constitute an untapped archive for documenting long-term ecological change in ways that direct sampling simply cannot provide for the pre-monitoring era.