“…Thus, clear‐cut phenotypic responses rather than genetic traits are considered as principal drivers in the maternal effects hypothesis (Bernardo, 1996; Johnston & Leggett, 2002). The maternal effects hypothesis has been verified in Atlantic cod ( Gadus morhua ; Chambers & Waiwood, 1996; Kjesbu et al, 1992; Marteinsdottir & Steinarsson, 1998; Vallin & Nissling, 2000), haddock ( Melanogrammus aeglefinus ; Hislop, 1988; Trippel & Neil, 2004), European sardine ( Sardina pilchardus ; Riveiro et al, 2004), Pacific herring ( Clupea pallasii ; Takayanagi & Ishida, 2002), black rockfish ( Sebastes melanops ; Berkeley et al, 2004), marbled sole ( Pseudopleuronectes yokohamae ; Higashitani et al, 2007), and walleye pollock ( G. chalcogrammus ; Tanaka et al, 2020). Tanaka et al (2020) showed that larger eggs of hatchery‐reared walleye pollock were spawned from fish that had greater increases in weight and condition during the non‐spawning season.…”