,
barbel and
lateral line on a haddock. Haddock have three
dorsal fins and two
anal fins. The haddock is a
demersal species which occurs at depths from , although it is most frequently recorded at . It is found over substrates made up of rock, sand, gravel or shells and it prefers temperatures of between . Off Iceland and in the Barents Sea, haddock undergo extensive migrations, but in the north western Atlantic its movements are more restricted, consisting of movements to and from their spawning areas. They reach sexual maturity at 4 years old in males and 5 years old in females, except for the population in the North Sea which matures at ages of 2 years in males and 3 years in females. The overall sex ratio is roughly 1:1, but in shallower areas, females predominate, while the males show a preference for waters further offshore. Their growth rate shows considerable regional variation and fish at one year old can measure , at 2 years old , up to at 13 years old. Their lifespan is around 14 years. In their larval stages, haddock mainly feed on the immature stages of
copepods,
ostracods and
limacina with their diet changing as they grow, moving on to larger pelagic prey such as
amphipods,
euphausiids, eggs of invertebrates, zoea larvae of
decapods and increasing numbers of copepods. Once they have reached the settled, demersal, post-larval stage, they gradually switch from pelagic to
benthic prey. however, they will feed opportunistically on smaller fish such as
capelin,
sandeels and
Norway pout. Juvenile haddock are an important prey for larger demersal fish, including other
gadoids, while seals prey on the larger fish. The recorded growth rates of haddock underwent significant change over the 30 to 40 years up to 2011. The haddock stock periodically has higher than normal productivity; for example in 1962 and 1967, and to a lesser extent, 1974 and 1999. These result in a more southerly distribution of the fish and have a strong effect on the biomass of the spawning stock, but because of high fishing mortality, these revivals do not have any lasting effect on the population. In general, there was above average recruitment from the 1960s up to the early 1980s, similar to recruitment for Atlantic cod and
whiting, this has been called the
gadoid outburst. There was strong recruitment in 1999 but since then, the recruitment rate has been very low. ==Parasites==