(Press-News.org) A new paper in Biology Methods and Protocols, published by Oxford University Press, finds that we can now distinguish wild from farmed salmon using deep learning, potentially greatly improving strategies for environmental protection.
Norway is home to the largest remaining wild populations of wild salmon and is also one of the largest producers of farmed salmon. Atlantic salmon abundance in Norway has declined by over 50% since the 1980s and is now at historically low levels. Escaped farmed salmon are an important reason for this decline. Norway produces over 1.5 million metric tons of farmed Atlantic salmon annually. Each year, however, approximately 300,000 farmed salmon escape into the wild.
Escaped salmon are a substantial ecological and genetic threat to wild populations since they increase competition for limited resources, such as food and spawning habitats, potentially displacing wild salmon or reducing their reproductive success. Farmed salmon also introduce pathogens and parasites such as sea lice, worsening pressures on wild salmon populations already vulnerable due to climate change and habitat degradation.
Farmed salmon differ genetically from wild populations and interbreeding between escaped farmed salmon and wild salmon leads to genetic changes that make wild salmon less fit to adapt to environmental changes or address threats around them. Genetic analysis shows that approximately two-thirds of wild salmon in Norway carry genetic signatures that indicate interbreeding with farmed salmon.
Scientists monitor escaped farmed salmon using genetic analysis and examination of fish scales. Monitoring differences in fish scale patterns by hand is time consuming and extremely expensive, however. Investigators can distinguish wild from farmed salmon because salmon scales grow by forming concentric rings on their surface. Like with tree rings, the number and spacing of these rings correspond to the growth of the fish. Farmed salmon have scales that represent rapid and steady growth, resulting in regularly spaced scales with limited seasonal markers. In contrast, wild salmon experience pronounced seasonal variation in growth driven by inconsistent temperatures, prey availability, and migration.
To help researchers distinguish between different types of salmon at a larger scale, researchers here trained a new convolutional neural network using nearly 90,000 Atlantic salmon scale images from the Norwegian Veterinary Institute and the Norwegian Institute for Nature Research. They established a standardized processing pipeline and evaluated the model against human scale readers and known-origin fish.
The total dataset consisted of almost 90 thousand images, covering hundreds of rivers across Norway and going back to the early 1930s. Farmed salmon comprised approximately 8.5% of the total images compared to wild salmon.
The investigators found that the data pipeline and model can rapidly process images and provide predictions with associated confidence estimates. The model performed exceptionally well, and was able differentiate farmed from wild salmon across most salmon rivers in Norway from 2009 to 2023 with 95% accuracy.
The paper, “Identifying escaped farmed salmon from fish scales using deep learning,” is available (at midnight on November 26th) at http://doi.org/10.1093/biomethods/bpaf078.
Direct correspondence to:
Malte Willmes
Norwegian Veterinary Institute
Angelltrøa, 7457 Trondheim, NORWAY
malte.willmes@nina.no
To request a copy of the study, please contact:
Daniel Luzer
daniel.luzer@oup.com
END
New deep-learning tool can tell if your salmon is wild or farmed
2025-11-26
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
If you're over 60 and playing with sex toys, you're not alone
2025-11-26
CLEVELAND, Ohio (Nov 26, 2025) –Although research on sexuality in older adults has been growing in recent years, most of the studies are focused on partnered sexual activity and not on solo sexual behavior, including masturbation or the use of sex toys. A new study specifically investigated sex toy use during partnered sex and masturbation in older adult women. Results of the study are published online today in Menopause, the journal of The Menopause Society.
Women are less likely to masturbate than men, and masturbation tends to be negatively associated with age. Women are more likely to use masturbation as complementary ...
Fame itself may be critical factor in shortening singers’ lives
2025-11-26
Fame itself may be a critical factor in shortening singers’ lives beyond the hazards of the job—at least those in the UK/Europe and North America—suggests research published online in the Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health.
These stars seem to die around 4 years earlier, on average, than their peers who haven’t achieved celebrity status, and the effects of fame are on a par with certain other health risks, suggest the researchers.
Previously published research indicates that famous singers tend to die earlier than the general public. But it’s far from clear ...
Daily coffee drinking may slow biological ageing of people with major mental illness
2025-11-26
Drinking a maximum of 3-4 cups of coffee a day may slow the ‘biological’ ageing of people with severe mental illness, by lengthening their telomeres—indicators of cellular ageing—and giving them the equivalent of 5 extra biological years, compared with non-coffee drinkers, finds research published in the open access journal BMJ Mental Health.
But no such effects were observed beyond this quota, which is the maximum daily intake recommended by several international health authorities, including the NHS and the US Food and Drug Administration.
Telomeres sit ...
New highly efficient material turns motion into power – without toxic lead
2025-11-26
Embargoed copy of the research paper available on request
Scientists have developed a new material that converts motion into electricity (piezoelectricity) with greater efficiency and without using toxic lead - paving the way for a new generation of devices that we use in everyday life.
Publishing their discovery in Journal of the American Chemical Society today (26 Nov) researchers from the University of Birmingham, University of Oxford, and University of Bristol describe a material that is both durable and sensitive to movement - opening possibilities for a wide range of innovative devices such as sensors, wearable electronics, and self-powered devices.
Based on bismuth iodide, an inorganic ...
The DEVILS in the details: New research reveals how the cosmic landscape impacts the galaxy lifecycle
2025-11-26
A team of astronomers from the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR) has released new data from an extensive galaxy evolution survey that found a galaxy’s ‘neighbourhood’ plays a major role in how it changes over time.
The Deep Extragalactic Visible Legacy Survey, or DEVILS for short, has released its initial data and a series of recent publications explaining how a galaxy’s location in the Universe can significantly influence its evolution. The survey combines data ...
After nearly 100 years, scientists may have detected dark matter
2025-11-25
In the early 1930s, Swiss astronomer Fritz Zwicky observed galaxies in space moving faster than their mass should allow, prompting him to infer the presence of some invisible scaffolding — dark matter — holding the galaxies together. Nearly 100 years later, NASA’s Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope may have provided direct evidence of dark matter, allowing the invisible matter to be “seen” for the very first time.
Dark matter has remained largely a mystery since it was proposed so many years ago. Up to this point, scientists have only been able to indirectly observe ...
Gender imbalance hinders equitable environmental governance, say UN scientists
2025-11-25
Key Findings of the Report:
Global Imbalance: Across all three conventions (UNFCCC, UNCCD, CBD), men hold 496 (60%) focal point roles compared to 334 (40%) held by women.
Convention Disparities: The UNCCD has the lowest female representation (35%), while the UNFCCC and CBD stand at 41% and 45%, respectively.
Regional Gaps: Africa faces the steepest challenge, with women representing only 25% of focal points, whereas Eastern Europe leads with 67% female representation.
Exclusive Representation: 51 countries are represented entirely by ...
Six University of Tennessee faculty among world’s most highly cited researchers
2025-11-25
Six faculty members from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville — five from the Tickle College of Engineering and one from the College of Arts and Sciences — have been named to Clarivate’s Highly Cited Researchers list for 2025, an honor bestowed on only one in 1,000 of the world’s scientists and social scientists. The designation recognizes researchers whose publications are among the top 1% by citations in their respective fields over the past decade.
“Being ...
A type of immune cell could hold a key to preventing scar tissue buildup in wounds
2025-11-25
Researchers at the University of Arizona uncovered a previously unknown population of circulating immune cells that play a critical role in fibrosis, the buildup of scar tissue that can lead to organ failure and disfigurement. The findings, published in Nature Biomedical Engineering, add to the understanding of the healing process and could lead to new strategies for preventing or treating fibrosis.
Fibrosis contributes to nearly half of all deaths in developed countries, including conditions such as pulmonary fibrosis, renal fibrosis, organ ...
Mountains as water towers: New research highlights warming differences between high and low elevations
2025-11-25
BOZEMAN – In new research published this week, work by a Montana State University scientist aims to explore the gradations in elevation-dependent changes in climate, including in mountainous ecosystems like those in Montana and the Rockies.
John Knowles, an assistant professor in MSU’s Department of Land Resources and Environmental Sciences in the College of Agriculture, is one of nearly two dozen authors from around the world on the new paper, titled “Elevation-dependent climate change in mountain environments.” The work was published Nov. 25 in ...