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Species Directory

Sablefish

Overview Seafood Wild-Caught Fishery Aquaculture Science Resources
Sablefish, also known as black cod, is a tasty, buttery fish highly valued on the seafood market. With its prized taste and popularity in the Pacific Northwest, there is a growing interest in commercial farming. Learn more about wild and farmed sablefish.

Sablefish

Anoplopoma fimbria

Profile drawing of a sablefish
Also Known As
Black cod, Butterfish, Skil, Beshow, Coalfish

Quick Facts

Length
2 to 3 feet
Lifespan
Up to 90 years
Region
Alaska, West Coast
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sablefish.jpg

Sablefish swimming just above the sea floor. Credit: NOAA's Northwest Fisheries Science Center

About the Species

sablefish.jpg

Sablefish swimming just above the sea floor. Credit: NOAA's Northwest Fisheries Science Center

Sablefish are a deepwater species native to the Pacific Northwest and Alaska. They are a tasty source of protein, rich in omega-3 fatty acids, and fetch a high price in local markets. Sablefish have been identified as a potential species for commercial farming in the Pacific Northwest, where they are the target of a sustainably managed commercial and recreational fishery. The United States currently does not produce farmed sablefish, but researchers are experimenting with raising them in hopes of creating a viable commercial aquaculture industry.

Appearance

  • Sablefish look much like cod. They are often referred to as black cod, even though they are not actually part of the cod family.

Biology

  • Females can grow more than 3 feet in length.
  • Females are able to reproduce at 6 ½ years old and more than 2 feet in length.
  • Males are able to reproduce at age 5 and 1.9 feet in length.
  • Sablefish spawn in deeper water along the continental slope from January to April in Alaska waters, and from January to March between California and British Columbia.
  • Eggs develop in deep water for about 2 weeks until they hatch, then rise to the surface.
  • Hatched larvae are moved by surface currents.
  • Off southeast Alaska and British Columbia, juveniles appear in nearshore waters by fall.
  • Juveniles have been found to migrate more than 2,000 miles in 6 or 7 years.
  • Sablefish can live to be more than 90 years old.

Where They Live

Range

  • Sablefish are found in the northeastern Pacific Ocean from northern Mexico to the Gulf of Alaska, westward to the Aleutian Islands and into the Bering Sea.
  • There are two populations in the Pacific Ocean:
    • Northern population inhabits Alaska and northern British Columbia waters.
    • Southern population inhabits southern British Columbia, Washington, Oregon, and California waters.
    • Both populations mix off southwest Vancouver Island and northwest Washington.
  • They are most commonly found in Alaska waters.

Habitat

  • Adults live on mud bottoms in waters deeper than 650 feet.
  • Juveniles live throughout the water column in nearshore waters.

Scientific Classification

Kingdom Animalia
Phylum Chordata
Class Actinopterygii
Order Scorpaeniformes
Family Anoplopomatidae
Genus Anoplopoma
Species fimbria

Last updated by NOAA Fisheries on 03/20/2025


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Dissected sablefish revealing stomach contents Scientists examined the stomach contents of juvenile sablefish in coastal waters, finding evidence of their voracious appetite including other fish almost as big as they are. Photo by Elizabeth Daly/CIMERS.
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Offloading frozen Pacific cod from a catcher-processor vessel in Dutch Harbor, Alaska. Offloading frozen Pacific cod from a catcher-processor vessel in Dutch Harbor, Alaska. Credit: NOAA Fisheries / Paul Hillman.
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West Coast Groundfish

Seafood Facts

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Is Sablefish Sustainable?

U.S. wild-caught sablefish is a smart seafood choice because it is sustainably managed and responsibly harvested under U.S. regulations.

Environmental Impact Icon

Availability

Year-round.

Feeds Icon

Source

Wild-caught off Alaska, Washington, Oregon, and California. U.S.-farmed sablefish is not currently available commercially.

Farming Methods Icon

Taste

Sablefish have high oil content, making them exceptionally flavorful. They are often called butterfish because of their melt-in-your-mouth, oil-rich meat.

Human Health Icon

Texture

Soft, velvety texture. Their meat has large, white flakes.

Human Health Icon

Health Benefits

Very high in long-chain omega-3 fatty acids, EPA, and DHA.

Nutrition Facts

Servings: 1; Serving Weight: 100 g (raw); Calories: 195; Protein: 13.41 g; Total Fat: 15.3 g; Total Saturated Fatty Acids: 3.201 g; Carbohydrate: 0 g; Total Sugars: 0 g; Total Dietary Fiber: 0 g; Cholesterol: 49 mg; Selenium: 36.5 mcg; Sodium: 56 mg

More Information

  • Sustainable Seafood
  • Sign Up for "Taste of the Tides" Newsletter

Sablefish Recipes

Looking for some ways to add sablefish into your rotation? If you need cooking inspiration, browse these recipes for miso sablefish power bowls, sautéed sablefish, and more!

Read More
a birds-eye view of a white bowl speckled with black dots. in the bowl is rice, cooked vegetables, and a seared fish filet sprinkled with black sesame seeds. also in the bowl is a four-pronged gold fork.

Last updated by NOAA Fisheries on 03/20/2025


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Fish sitting on ice in a metal bowl. Fresh-caught taʻape on ice. Credit: Conservation International Hawaiʻi.
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Two Hawaiian monk seals swim near an aquaculture net pen full of fish. NOAA Fisheries, in collaboration with Blue Ocean Mariculture, is conducting a multi-year pilot study to evaluate observational methods and tools for studying Hawaiian monk seal behavior. Courtesy of Blue Ocean Mariculture
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Last updated by NOAA Fisheries on 03/20/2025

Wild-Caught Fishery

Sablefish is one of the highest valued finfish in Alaska and Pacific Northwest commercial fisheries.

Population Status Icon

Population

The stocks are not overfished.

Fishing Status Icon

Fishing Rate

Not subject to overfishing.

Habitat Impacts Icon

Habitat Impacts

The trawl, longline, and pot gear used to harvest sablefish have minimal or temporary effects on habitat.

Bycatch Icon

Bycatch

Regulations limit the amount of incidentally caught and discarded fish in the Alaska fishery. The catch shares program on the West Coast creates incentives to reduce bycatch.

Population Status

There are two stocks of sablefish: Eastern Bering Sea/Aleutian Islands/Gulf of Alaska and Pacific coast. According to the most recent stock assessments:

  • The Eastern Bering Sea/Aleutian Islands/Gulf of Alaska stock is not overfished (2023 stock assessment) and not subject to overfishing based on 2023 catch data. Summary stock assessment information can be found on Stock SMART.
  • The Pacific coast stock is not overfished (2023 stock assessment) and not subject to overfishing based on 2022 catch data. Summary stock assessment information can be found on Stock SMART.

Fishery Management

  • NOAA Fisheries and the North Pacific Fishery Management Council manage the sablefish fishery in Alaska.
  • Managed under the Gulf of Alaska and Bering Sea/Aleutian Islands Groundfish Fishery Management Plans:
    • Fishing season runs from approximately March 1 to November 15 (subject to change each year).
    • Fixed gear (longlines and pots) harvests 90 percent of annual quota and trawl gear harvests about 10 percent.
    • The majority of fixed gear is managed with an individual fishing quota (catch shares) program.
  • The State of Alaska manages fisheries in state waters under a shared quota system and also manages separate state fisheries.
  • NOAA Fisheries and the Pacific Fishery Management Council manage the sablefish fishery on the West Coast.
  • Managed under the Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery Management Plan:
    • Coast-wide catch limits among different fishing groups and gear types.
    • Daily trip limits for some vessels.
    • Individual fishing quota (catch shares) for the trawl fishery and some of the fixed gear fishery. The West Coast groundfish trawl fishery is managed under a trawl rationalization catch share program.
    • Full observer coverage in the trawl fishery, partial coverage in the fixed gear fishery.

Harvest

  • Commercial fishery:
    • In 2023, commercial landings of sablefish totaled 67 million pounds and were valued at $113 million, according to the NOAA Fisheries commercial fishing landings database.
    • Sablefish are the highest valued finfish per pound in Alaska and West Coast commercial fisheries because of their rich oil content.
  • Gear, habitat impacts, and bycatch:
    • Longlines are used to harvest the majority of sablefish in Alaska.
    • Increased catch efficiency, because of individual fishing quotas, reduces the number of hooks deployed and effects on bottom habitat.
    • Individual fishing quotas reduce bycatch by allowing fishermen to operate at a slower pace and providing incentives to fish efficiently.
    • Pot fishing has increased in the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands, and the Gulf of Alaska, in response to killer whale interactions with fishing.
    • West Coast fishermen harvest sablefish with trawls, longlines, and pots.
  • Recreational fishery:
    • Sablefish are occasionally caught in Alaska recreational fisheries during their summer migrations onto the continental shelf.

More Information

  • Sablefish Research in Alaska
  • Sablefish Aquaculture in the Pacific Northwest
  • Pacific Halibut and Sablefish Individual Fishing Quota (IFQ) Program in Alaska

Last updated by NOAA Fisheries on 03/20/2025

Aquaculture

U.S. farmed sablefish is a smart seafood choice because it is sustainably managed and responsibly harvested under U.S. regulations.

Environmental Impact Icon

Environmental Impact

Federal and state regulations and monitoring requirements ensure that sablefish farming (as practiced in the United States) has minimal impact on the environment.

Feeds Icon

Feeds

Farmed sablefish are incredibly efficient at converting feed to edible protein. Alternative feeds have been developed to reduce reliance on fish meal and fish oil from forage fish.

Farming Methods Icon

Farming Methods

Sablefish are spawned and raised in land-based hatcheries until large enough for transfer to net pens.

Human Health Icon

Human Health

Sablefish are rich in omega-3 fatty acids. Antibiotic use is strictly limited in the United States and is prescribed only on a case-by-case basis by an on-site veterinarian.

Management

  • Permitting for sablefish aquaculture is governed by federal, state, and local governments.
  • The federal agencies involved are NOAA, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture, the Environmental Protection Agency, the Food and Drug Administration, the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, and the Coast Guard.
  • All fisheries and aquaculture farms in federal waters must adhere to federal regulations including those in the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation & Management Act, the Endangered Species Act, the National Environmental Policy Act, the Clean Water Act, and the Marine Mammal Protection Act.

Farming Methods

  • Hatchery production:
    • NOAA’s Manchester Research Station, in partnership with the Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe and others, is experimentally growing juvenile sablefish.
    • Sablefish can be difficult to grow because it lives deep in the ocean and faces challenges like the high cost and duration of larval rearing.
    • Hatcheries can use captive or wild broodstock.
    • Eggs are fertilized externally and then are transferred to environmentally controlled tanks.
    • After hatching into fry, juvenile sablefish are raised to about 40 grams and then transferred to a grow-out facility.
  • Grow-out facilities:
    • Farmed sablefish are grown out in land-based tanks or net pens, which are enclosed cages submerged in an aquatic environment.
    • Juvenile sablefish are also transferred from Washington to grow-out facilities in Texas and Canada.
    • In Texas, experimental grow-out is in an indoor recirculating system on land.
    • When harvested, sablefish are between 5 and 7 pounds.

Production

  • The United States currently does not produce farmed sablefish commercially. However, with the species popularity and prized taste there is a growing interest in commercial farming.

Environmental Considerations

  • Water quality and benthic impacts:
    • Impacts to the environment can occur around fish farms when organic nutrients from uneaten food and fish waste exceed the capacity of the ecosystem to assimilate them.
    • Potential environmental impacts are largely avoided with proper farm siting, husbandry, management, and modern technologies.
    • Modeling interactions of farms and the environment can help guide decisions about siting locations.
    • Fish farms in the United States are required to meet waste discharge standards under the Clean Water Act.
    • When farms are sited in well-flushed water, nutrient enrichment in the water column is generally not detectable.
    • Proper siting in well-flushed erosional sea floors, and practices such as fallowing, control the impact of fish farms on the benthic environment.
  • Escapes:
    • On rare occasions farmed fish escape and can possibly interact with their wild counterparts.
    • Federal and state permits require containment management systems at all marine sites.
    • NOAA is using models to understand the risk of escaped fish affecting the genetic diversity of wild populations.

Animal Health

  • Management and remedies:
    • Fish diseases occur naturally in the wild, but their effects go unnoticed because dead fish quickly become prey.
    • Vaccines, probiotics, limiting farming density, high-quality diets, and controlled use of antibiotics prevent bacterial diseases in fish.
    • Management of viral infections occurs through thorough monitoring, healthy culture conditions, low stress environments, and good nutrition and genetics.
    • Parasites are controlled on farms using therapeutants, fallowing farm sites, and pest management such as the use of cleaner wrasses.
    • Most states have comprehensive aquatic animal health regulations, such as routine health exams by veterinarians.
  • Antibiotic use:
    • In the United States, antibiotics may only be used to treat bacterial infections in marine fish under direction of a veterinarian on a case-by-case basis.
    • Antibiotics are considered a method of last resort and cannot be preemptively fed to fish.
    • Special permits obtained from the Food & Drug Administration may be required.
    • Vaccines have been effective in reducing, and in some cases eliminating, the need for antibiotics.

Human Health

  • Contaminants:
    • Aquaculture feed is regulated and monitored by the FDA and state agencies to ensure feeds are not contaminated with heavy metals or methyl mercury.
    • Both wild and farmed seafood contain low levels of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs).
    • PCB levels in farmed sablefish are orders of magnitude below the FDA lower limit.
  • Health benefits:
    • Like wild sablefish, farmed sablefish contain high levels of omega-3 fatty acids.

More Information

  • Sablefish Aquaculture in the Pacific Northwest
  • Sablefish Research in Alaska
  • Pacific Halibut and Sablefish Individual Fishing Quota (IFQ) Program in Alaska
  • Understanding Marine Aquaculture

Last updated by NOAA Fisheries on 03/20/2025

Science Overview

NOAA Fisheries conducts various research activities on the biology, behavior, and population health of sablefish. The results of this research are used to inform management decisions for this species. For detailed information about stock status, management, assessments, and resource trends, you can search for sablefish, and any other species of interest, using NOAA’s StockSMART web tool.

500x333-SablefishSurveyImage2.jpg

Sablefish Research in Alaska

Scientists at NOAA’s Alaska Fisheries Science Center and Northwest Fisheries Science Center assess the abundance of sablefish in their region through annual longline surveys and trawl surveys every one to three years. Sablefish data are also collected by fishery observers and through required and voluntary logbook programs.

NOAA Fisheries has been tagging and releasing sablefish in Alaskan waters since 1972. Although the results of longline surveys are the primary data used to determine sablefish quotas, tag data provide complementary information that enhances survey data. For example, using data from the tagging program, scientists have discovered that sablefish are highly migratory and that their migration can affect the amount of fish available for harvest in an area.

Learn more about Sablefish research in Alaska

Researching Farmed Sablefish

Aquaculture Management

NOAA collaborates with a variety of partners to research new and evolving techniques for farming sablefish sustainably. For example, the National Ocean Service’s CASS Program assesses aquaculture environmental interactions and develops spatial planning and eco forecasting tools. NOAA Fisheries and partners also work on the OMEGA Model to assess risk and develop management approaches that address the genetic and ecological effects of escaped fish on wild fish of the same species.

Growth and Reproduction

The Northwest Fisheries Science Center’s Manchester Research Station has been exploring techniques to produce all-female sablefish stocks, which grow significantly faster than males. They have also been developing sablefish larval rearing techniques to reduce the cost and duration of rearing, and studying sablefish genetics to understand how fish grow, resist disease, and mature.

The Southwest Fisheries Science Center has been using genetics and genomics to evaluate broodstock selection and investigate how genetics of reared fish relate to health and fitness.

Research & Data

2024 Gulf Of Alaska Ecosystem Status Report: In Brief

This assessment summarizes and synthesizes climate, biological, and fishing effects on the shelf and slope regions of the Gulf of Alaska (GOA), from an ecosystem perspective, and to provides an assessment of the possible future.
December 05, 2024 - Assessments ,
Alaska

Ecosystem Status Report 2024 Gulf of Alaska

This assessment summarizes and synthesizes climate, biological, and fishing effects on the shelf and slope regions of the Gulf of Alaska, from an ecosystem perspective, and to provides an assessment of the possible future.
December 05, 2024 - Assessments ,
Alaska

2024 Aleutian Islands Ecosystem Status Report: In Brief

This assessment summarizes and synthesizes historical climate and fishing effects on the shelf and slope regions of the Aleutian Islands (AI) from an ecosystem perspective, and provides an assessment of the possible future.
December 05, 2024 - Assessments ,
Alaska

Ecosystem Status Report 2024 Aleutian Islands

This assessment summarizes and synthesizes historical climate and fishing effects on the shelf and slope regions of the Aleutian Islands (AI) from an ecosystem perspective, and provides an assessment of the possible future.
December 05, 2024 - Assessments ,
Alaska
View More

More Information

  • Alaska Sablefish Fisheries and Assessments
  • Alaska Sablefish Tagging Program
  • Fish Out of Water: How Capture Affects Sablefish Health, Reflexes, and Survival
  • Observations of Fine-Scale Juvenile Sablefish Movements Reveal Behavioral Patte…
  • Research Findings Lead to a More Optimistic Picture of Sablefish

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Innovation to Learn More About Alaska's Deep-Sea Corals and the Species that Live There Post #6

Survey
An underwater photograph shows a diverse muddy bottom habitat with brittlestars, stylasterid (lace) corals, and other invertebrates forming a deep-sea coral ecosystem in the North Pacific. Credit: NOAA Fisheries Diverse benthic habitat, showing brittlestars, a crinoid, and stylasterid corals of the genus Stylaster. Stylasterid (Stylasteridae) corals are among the most important habitat-forming invertebrates in deep-sea coral ecosystems in the North Pacific. They are also known as ‘lace corals’ or ‘hydrocorals’. Like their warm water cousins the stony coral, found in coral reefs, they have rigid skeletons made of calcium carbonate. Credit: NOAA Fisheries
Fisheries Observer

Winter Observing On A Commercial Longline Vessel - Post #6

Fisheries Observer
A sunrise over the Bering Sea. Credit: Rory Morgan, Alaska Observers Inc. Edited by NOAA Fisheries Red sky at morning over the Bering Sea. Credit: Rory Morgan, Alaska Observers Inc.
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Last updated by NOAA Fisheries on 03/20/2025

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Last updated by NOAA Fisheries on 03/20/2025

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