Gadiformes , also called the Anacanthini, are an order of ray-finned fish that include the cod, hakes, pollock, haddock, burbot, rocklings and moras, many of which are food fish of major commercial value. They are mostly marine fish found throughout the world and the vast majority are found in temperate or colder regions (tropical species are typically deep-water) while a few species may enter brackish estuaries. Pacific tomcods, one of the two species that makes up the genus Microgadus, are able to enter freshwater, but there is no evidence that they breed there. Some populations of landlocked Atlantic tomcod on the other hand, complete their entire life cycle in freshwater. Yet only one species, the burbot (Lota lota), is a true freshwater fish.
Common characteristics include the positioning of the pelvic fins (if present), below or in front of the pectoral fins. Gadiformes are physoclists, which means their swim bladders do not have a pneumatic duct. The fins are spineless. Gadiform fish range in size from the codlets, which may be as small as in adult length, to the Atlantic cod, Gadus morhua, which reaches up to .
The earliest gadiforms are Palaeogadus weltoni from the Maastrichtian of the United States and the undescribed, informally named "Protocodus" from the Early Paleocene of Greenland.
Taxonomy
The following classification is based on Eschmeyer's Catalog of Fishes:
- Order Gadiformes
- Suborder Stylephoroidei
- Family Stylephoridae <small>Swainson, 1839</small> (tube-eyes or threadtails)
- Suborder Bregmacerotoidei
- Family Bregmacerotidae <small>Gill, 1872</small> (codlets)
- Suborder Gadoidei
- Genus â Rhinocephalus <small>Casier, 1966</small> (fossil; Early Eocene of England)
- Family Phycidae <small>Swainson, 1838</small> (phycid hakes)
- Family Gaidropsaridae <small>Jordan & Evermann, 1898</small> (rocklings)
- Family Lotidae <small>Bonaparte, 1835</small> (hakes and burbots)
- Family Gadidae <small>Rafinesque, 1810</small> (cods and haddocks)
- Suborder Ranicipitoidei
- Family Ranicipitidae <small>Bonaparte, 1835</small> (tadpole fishes)
- Suborder Merluccioidei
- Family Merlucciidae <small>Rafinesque, 1815</small> (merlucciid hakes)
- Suborder Macrouroidei
- Family Euclichthyidae <small>Cohen, 1984</small> (Eucla cods)
- Family Muraenolepididae <small>Regan, 1903</small> (eel cods)
- Family Melanonidae <small>Goode & Bean, 1896</small> (arrowtails or pelagic cods)
- Family Trachyrincidae <small>Goode & Bean, 1896</small> (armoured grenadiers)
- Family Moridae <small>Moreau, 1881</small> (codlings or deepsea cods)
- Family Macruronidae <small>Regan, 1903</small> (blue grenadiers)
- Family Lyconidae <small>Günther, 1887</small> (Atlantic hakes)
- Family Bathygadidae <small>Jordan & Evermann, 1898</small> (rattails)
- Family Steindachneriidae <small>Parr, 1942</small> (luminous hakes)
- Family Macrouridae <small>Bonaparte, 1831</small> (grenadiers or rattails)
Timeline of genera
References