Flounder and sole
Description:
Starry founder (Platichthys stellatus), English
sole (Parophrys vetulus), and Dover sole (Microstomus
pacificus) are flattened demersal (bottom dwelling) fish.
Young flatfish look like other fish until one of their eyes migrates to
the other side of their body and they begin swimming on their sides
near the bottom with their eyeless side down. Flatfish vary greatly in
color but their “blind” side is pale and without
scales.
Distribution:
Flounder and sole are found from the Bering Sea to southern California
in sandy or muddy substrate. Juveniles are found in shallow water near
rivers and in estuaries in eelgrass beds. Adults generally are found in
deeper waters in the winter and migrate to shallower water in the
spring. In Whatcom County waters, surveys show wide distribution of
English sole in north county waters with overlapping distribution of
starry flounder and Dover, rock, and sand soles.

This Whatcom County map shows areas
where flounder and sole have been found. This map is based on data
compiled by Miller and Borton, Geographical distribution of Puget Sound
fishes (1980), and Washington Department of Fisheries, Technical Report
79 (1992). The map was created by People For Puget Sound. Click on map
for a larger image.
Reproduction:
Spawning
takes place in shallow water from winter to early spring, with females
releasing up to a million eggs that float near the surface and are
carried along by currents.
Ecology:
Adult flatfish are carnivorous, feeding on worms, clams, shrimps and
other small bottom-dwelling organisms. Juvenile flatfish are found in
shallow bays and estuaries and are preyed upon by herons, gulls,
otters, and other fish. These fish are dependent on clean habitats in
shallow bays and estuaries when growing up. In contaminated habitats,
high levels of toxic chemicals accumulate in their tissues, and they
develop disease, tumors, and reduced reproductive success.
Economic Value:
Flatfish have been harvested by native tribes for subsistence and
cultural purposes and are harvested commercially in Whatcom waters by
trawling. The commercial catch of starry flounder in Bellingham Bay and
the Strait of Georgia has declined from an annual catch of over half a
million pounds in 1988 and 1992 to 80,000 pounds in 2001. Commercial
harvest of sole species in the Strait of Georgia has averaged about
half a million pounds annually since 1983 and has increased to over
900,000 pounds in 2001. Some flatfish, such as rock sole which inhabit
shallow waters and take bait readily are caught on hook and line by
sport fishers, sometimes inadvertently when fishing for salmon.
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