Order Gadiformes — Cods—Family Gadidae
Three Pacific tomcod (2nd, 3rd and 4th fish) together with a barred surfperch and six white croaker (generally called tomcod in southern California and kingfish in northern California), all from the Pacifica Pier in 1976
Species: Microgadus proximus (Girard, 1854); from the Greek words micros (small) and gadus (codfish), and the Latin word proximus (next).
Alternate Names: Tomcod, piciata and wachna.
Identification: Typical cod-like shape with three dorsal fins and two anal fins. Tomcod have a short chin barbel. Their coloring is usually brownish above (although some are olive colored), and white below.
Size: To 12 inches; most caught off piers are 9-10 inches long.
Range: From Point Sal, California, to Unalaska Island, Alaska.
Habitat: Prefers a soft bottom (sand or mud), near-shore environment, although caught out to 700-foot depths.
Piers: Pacific tomcod may be seen at almost any pier north of Monterey Bay. However, I believe their numbers have decreased. Best bets: Pillar Point Harbor Pier, Pacifica Pier, San Francisco Municipal Pier, Fort Baker Pier, Point Arena Pier, Eureka Municipal Wharf, Trinidad Pier and the “B” Street Pier in Crescent City.
Shoreline: Rarely caught by inshore anglers.
Boats: A small, inshore species rarely taken by boat fishermen.
Bait and Tackle: When schools of tomcod move in, anglers can expect fast and furious action. The best bait appears to be pile worms, a small strip of anchovy, or a small strip of squid. Hooks should be small, size 6 or 8, and the best technique is to cast out, allow the bait to sink, and begin to retrieve as soon as the bait hits bottom. The tomcod usually will hit the bait mid-depth as it is being pulled up.
Food Value: Most tomcod are really too small for eating although some people like to pan-fry them as they would any small fish and they are said to have a sweet, delicate flavor.
Comments: When I lived in the Bay Area in the ‘70s one of my main fishing spots was the Pacific Pier and one of the most common fish I caught was Pacific tomcod. I caught them during every month of the year but the summer months were generally the best. I caught a few at other piers—primarily Fort Point and Fort Baker, but never in the numbers seen at Pacifica. I moved north to Mendocino County in 1979 and soon after began to fish the Point Arena Pier. Once again good numbers of Pacific tomcod began to show up. However, that pier was destroyed in a winter storm in 1983 and did not reopen until 1987. After the reopening of the new pier I never saw the same numbers of tomcod that I had seen previously. Visits to Pacifica in the past 30 years have shown much of the same — few if any Pacific tomcod. I’m not sure if I just missed them or if their numbers have decreased.
Small tomcod are fun to catch on light tackle and they provide a major source of fun for children angling in northern areas (Washington north). They are not to be confused with white croaker (Genyonemus lineatus) that are generally called tom cod in southern California.
According to Milton Love (one of our favorite marine biologists), “this species is very closely related to saffron cod.” Although I’ve heard of cod cooked in saffron, I had never heard of THE saffron cod! It turns out saffron cod, Eleginus gracilis (Tilesius, 1810), is a small, similar-looking fish found in Pacific arctic waters (the arctic-boreal Pacific). The range is from Korea and the Sea of Okhotsk in the west to the northern Gulf of Alaska and Banks Island in the east. Although small, they’re commercially fished with the major fishing grounds for Russian boats in the western North Pacific: Peter the Great Bay, Sakhalin region, Sea of Okhotsk and Kamchatka waters. Alaskan fisherman typically fish in Norton Sound. Most of the commercial catch winds up in Russia although the fish is also popular in Japan.
More anecdotal material: As a youngster I and my brothers bottom fished tomcod with handlines off Pier One in Astoria (1953,54,55) and memory fails, but I seem to remember using beef liver as bait. While eating a tin of brisling sardines, tomcod came to mind. I doubt they are still present in sufficient numbers to constitute a viable fishery.
I’ve not been able to get any numbers on the species in California but I believe they are still a very viable fishery further north. But, I haven’t caught any in the Bay Area for quite some time. Ken
Enjoyed reading on these little fish. In the early 60’s my grandparents would take me to the cement boat at Sea Cliff in Aptos. My grandparents lived on the cliff overlooking the now wreckage. It was fully intact then. Anyway, they would set me up with “lucky Joes” (red and yellow yard on small hooks with no bait and four hooks. I’d reel up four tomcod at a time. Usually 6” to 10”. I’d catch a small bucket full and we’d walk back up. My grandfather would clean and my grandmother would fry until golden brown with salt and pepper. Geeze I loved my fishing days with my family. Sixty years have passed and those days (many) were some of my best.