Platycephalidae was first proposed as a family in 1839 by the English naturalist
William Swainson. Other authorities differ and do not consider the Scorpaeniformes to be a valid order because the
Perciformes is not
monophyletic without the taxa within the Scorpaeniformes being included within it. These authorities consider the Platycephalidae to belong to the
suborder Platycephaloidei, along with the families
Bembridae,
Parabembridae,
Hoplichthyidae and
Plectrogeniidae within the Perciformes.
Genera Platycephalidae has the following 17 genera (including about 86 species) classified within it: Platycephalidae has been divided into as many as 5
subfamilies by some authors but Fishes of the World does not recognise subfamilies but does state that some authors recognise two subfamilies. These two groupings are thought to have become divergent in the
Eocene with the Platycephalinae being predominantly temperate and Onigociinae, being predominantly tropical. The basal Platycephalinae species are confined to southern Australia and the more derived taxa have diversified in the tropical Indo-West Pacific. The genus
Sorsogona is recognised by
Fishbase but, apparently, it does not include the
type species,
Sorsogona serrulata, as a species within it.
Catalog of Fishes treats this genus as a
synonym of
Rogadius but classifies all the species in
Ratabulus, including the type species, which it treats as a synonym of
Ratabulus tuberculatus.
Etymology The name of the family is derived from the
Greek words
platy, meaning "flat", and
kephale for "head". ==Description==