“…In the past, N e was considered difficult to estimate but this situation has changed (Leberg, ; Schwartz, Tallmon, & Luikart, ). As a consequence, N e is nowadays commonly estimated for varied marine taxa: mammals (DeWoody et al., ), crustaceans (Watson, McKeown, Coscia, Wootton, & Ironside, ), corals (Holland, Jenkins, & Stevens, ) and fishes (Laconcha et al., ; Pita, Pérez, Velasco, & Presa, ; Zhivotovsky et al., ). Among commercial fish species, both target (Montes et al., ; Poulsen, Nielsen, Schierup, Loeschcke, & GrøNkjaer, ) and by‐catch species (Chevolot, Ellis, Rijnsdorp, Stam, & Olsen, ) have been studied, representing a wide range of life history strategies, habitats, population structures but also census population sizes (i.e., total number of individuals in the population including immatures, denoted N ), from hundreds to billions of individuals.…”