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The [[common name]] '''''dory''''' (from the [[Middle English]] ''dorre'', from the [[Middle French]] ''doree'', lit. "gilded one") is shared (officially and colloquially) by members of several different [[family (biology)|families]] of large-eyed, silvery, deep-bodied, laterally compressed, and roughly discoid marine [[fish]]. As well as resembling each other, dories are also similar in habit: most are deep-sea and [[benthos|demersal]]. Additionally, many species support commercial [[fishery|fisheries]] and are considered excellent [[food fish]]. Most dory families belong to the [[order (biology)|order]] [[Zeiformes]], suborder Zeioidei:
The [[common name]] '''''dory''''' (from the [[Middle English]] ''dorre'', from the [[Middle French]] ''doree'', lit. "gilded one") is shared (officially and colloquially) by members of several different [[family (biology)|families]] of large-eyed, silvery, deep-bodied, laterally compressed, and roughly discoid marine [[fish]]. As well as resembling each other, dories are also similar in habit: most are deep-sea and [[benthos|demersal]]. Additionally, many species support commercial [[fishery|fisheries]] and are considered excellent [[food fish]]. Most dory families belong to the [[order (biology)|order]] [[Zeiformes]], suborder Zeioidei:


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== See also ==
== See also ==
*[[List of fish common names]]
*[[List of fish common names]]

[[Category:Zeiformes]]


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Revision as of 13:38, 10 November 2006

The common name dory (from the Middle English dorre, from the Middle French doree, lit. "gilded one") is shared (officially and colloquially) by members of several different families of large-eyed, silvery, deep-bodied, laterally compressed, and roughly discoid marine fish. As well as resembling each other, dories are also similar in habit: most are deep-sea and demersal. Additionally, many species support commercial fisheries and are considered excellent food fish. Most dory families belong to the order Zeiformes, suborder Zeioidei:

Additionally, several species of spinyfin (family Diretmidae, order Beryciformes) have been given the name dory by fishmongers, presumably to make the fish more marketable.

See also


Dory was also the name of a small fish in the Pixar film Finding Nemo. Voiced by Ellen DeGeneres, Dory was accompaniment and a friend to Marlin, the father of the title character, Nemo, who got lost in the ocean after a deep sea diver collected him to be added to the diver's personal fish tank.