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But supermarkets say their supply chains are robust, and authorities and some experts say that, even if diseased fish was being sold, the bacteria that has been blamed for salmon deaths would not put consumers’ health at risk.
Is diseased salmon making its way to supermarket shelves?
But while the bacterium isn’t harmful to humans, it can be lethal for salmon.

People protested against salmon farming at a beach in Verona Sands in southern Tasmania last week. Source: AAP / Ethan James
David Booth, a professor of marine ecology at the University of Technology Sydney, told SBS News the overcrowding of salmon in farms could be a cause of disease.
“But there could be a risk to other wild fish; you don’t want aquaculture fish escaping into the wild or transmitting disease.”
SBS News contacted Huon Aquaculture for comment.
What food safety protocols exist?
“So that’s essentially a risk assessment process that looks at each step of the processing.”

According to the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry’s outlook, the industry’s real value is projected to be $2.21 billion by 2029, largely driven by the value of salmon. Source: SBS News
Wild-caught versus farmed fish
“But, of course, the farmed variety is subject to much more investigation and study, these days I think it’s probably converging on the wild as far as nutritional value.”