The Australian prowfishes were first recognised as a family in 1872 by the American
biologist Theodore Gill, with the type species of the family being
Pataecus fronto, which had been described by
John Richardson in 1844. The 5th edition of
Fishes of the World classifies the family within the
suborder Scorpaenoidei, which in turn is classified within the order Scorpaeniformes. Other authorities place Scorpaenoidei within the order
Perciformes. A recent study placed this family into an expanded
stonefish clade, Synanceiidae, due to the presence of a lachrymal sabre — a switch-blade-like mechanism that can be projected from underneath their eye — in all these fishes. This classification is followed by ''
Eschmeyer's Catalog of Fishes''. The name of the family comes from the genus
Pataecus, which is derived from
Pataikos, a strangely shaped dwarf-like
Phoenician deity which was used as a
figurehead on the
prows of ships. ==Genera==