International audienceLike other seafood products, tuna is highly perishable and sensitive to microbial spoilage. Its consumption, whether fresh or canned, can lead to severe food poisoning due to the presence of histamine-producing bacteria and other specific spoilage organisms (SSOs) found in the tuna microbiome. Such bacteria generally develop in dead fish after their capture if conservation conditions are deficient. However, many grey areas persist regarding their ecology, their conditions of emergence and proliferation, and their distribution within different organs. In this study, we used 16S rDNA barcoding to investigate post-mortem changes in the tuna necrobiome until the advanced stages of decomposition (i.e. 120 h). The analyses w...