Yes, there are. The Atlantic salmon are susceptible to sea lice, as are rainbow trout, as are steelhead, for example, in the ocean. Steelhead, for example, will lose their lice as they go back to the estuary and up the rivers, because lice just don't like non-sea water. So they might get lice when they're out in the ocean, but they lose them by the time they get back in the rivers.
There are two types of lice, mainly. For the purposes of this discussion, there are salmon lice and there are herring lice, many different species of each, but the salmon lice occur on all of the five species of Pacific salmon as well as the Atlantic salmon that are farmed.
We have monitored chinook salmon that are farmed, and they have few to zero lice on them to the point where it's not even worth making the effort to try to count them, so we don't monitor the chinook lice.