Common dab
The common dab (Limanda limanda) is a small species of flatfish in the family Pleuronectidae, characterized by a short, deep body with both eyes on the right side, a strongly arched lateral line, and rough skin lacking bony tubercles; it typically measures 25 cm in length but can reach up to 40 cm and 1 kg in weight.[1][2] This benthic marine fish inhabits sandy or muddy bottoms in temperate coastal waters of the northeastern Atlantic Ocean, primarily at depths of 20 to 150 meters, though juveniles prefer very shallow inshore areas less than 1 meter deep and adults migrate seasonally.[1][2] Native to regions from the Bay of Biscay northward to Iceland, including the North Sea, Norwegian Sea, Barents Sea, White Sea, and Baltic Sea (spanning latitudes 43°N to 72°N and longitudes 25°W to 45°E), the common dab is an oceanodromous species that thrives in waters with temperatures between 6.9°C and 11.8°C.[1] It feeds mainly on bottom-dwelling invertebrates such as crustaceans, polychaete worms, molluscs, and echinoderms, as well as small fishes, using a distinctive feeding behavior where it raises its head to strike at prey.[1][2] Reproduction occurs as a batch spawner during spring to early summer, with sexual maturity reached at around 21.5 cm (typically 2-3 years of age) and a maximum lifespan of 12 years; fecundity varies but supports abundant populations.[1][2] Ecologically, the common dab plays a role in coastal food webs as both predator and prey, while commercially it is an important target for fisheries in the North Sea and Baltic, caught via trawls and seine nets and marketed fresh, frozen, dried, salted, or smoked, with global capture production peaking at around 25,000 tonnes in recent decades.[2][3] The species is classified as Least Concern by the IUCN due to its wide distribution and resilience, though it faces moderate vulnerability from fishing pressure (with a low resilience index indicating a doubling time of 4.5-14 years).[1][4]Taxonomy and classification
Scientific classification
The common dab (Limanda limanda) is a marine flatfish species classified within the order Pleuronectiformes, which encompasses right-eyed flatfishes characterized by their asymmetrical body form and benthic lifestyle.[5] The binomial name Limanda limanda was established by Carl Linnaeus in 1758, based on the original description under the junior synonym Pleuronectes limanda.[1] The full taxonomic hierarchy, according to the Integrated Taxonomic Information System (ITIS), is as follows:- Kingdom: Animalia[5]
- Subkingdom: Bilateria[5]
- Infrakingdom: Deuterostomia[5]
- Phylum: Chordata[5]
- Subphylum: Vertebrata[5]
- Infraphylum: Gnathostomata[5]
- Superclass: Actinopterygii[5]
- Class: Teleostei[5]
- Superorder: Acanthopterygii[5]
- Order: Pleuronectiformes[5]
- Suborder: Pleuronectoidei[5]
- Family: Pleuronectidae[5]
- Subfamily: Pleuronectinae[5]
- Tribe: Pleuronectini[5]
- Genus: Limanda[5]
- Species: Limanda limanda (Linnaeus, 1758)[5]