Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) - landlocked salmon Author William Converse Kendall (1861–1939)  
Description
English: Landlocked salmon, Salmo sebago (Girard). Nearly ripe female, 19 inches long. From Rangely Stream, Oquossoc, Med .
Subject: Lake trout
Tag: Fish
Date 1918
Source/Photographer
English: Kendall, William Converse (1918) Rangeley Lakes, Maine : With Special Reference to the Habits of the Fishes, Fish Culture, and Angling, Bulletin of the United States Bureau of Fisheries, vol.35, 1915-1916, Washington, DC: Government Printing Office
Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:FMIB_38994_Landlocked_salmon,_Salmo_sebago_(Girard)_Nearly_ripe_female,_19_inches_long_From_Rangely_Stream,_Oquossoc,_Med.jpeg
The Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) is a species of ray-finned fish in the family Salmonidae. It is found in the northern Atlantic Ocean, in rivers that flow into the north Atlantic and, due to human introduction, in the north Pacific Ocean. Atlantic salmon that do not journey to sea are known as landlocked salmon or ouananiche.