“…Furthermore, some males never leave their home river and instead mature at a small size (down to 5 g) at the parr life stage, and so, mature individuals returning from the sea can be several thousand times larger (up to 25 kg and higher) than their mature river-bound counterparts. In recent decades, there have been conservation concerns for wild Atlantic salmon stocks due to population declines, with factors suggested to have contributed to these declines including climate change, aquaculture, illegal fishing, habitat degradation, hydropower dams and harvesting of prey species ( Einum et al , 2008 ; Chaput, 2012 ; ICES, 2019 ; Dadswell et al , 2021 ; Lennox et al , 2021 ; Czorlich et al , 2022 ; Harvey et al , 2022 ; Vollset et al , 2022 ). Some of these factors have also been associated with life history changes in the wild stocks, with some populations experiencing a decrease in the number or proportion of early-maturing individuals ( Vollset et al , 2022 ), while others are reporting a decrease in large, late-maturing individuals ( Czorlich et al , 2018 , 2022 ; Olmos et al , 2019 ).…”