Queen Angelfish? tank size?

toodle

New Member
Whats the smallest tank size to house a Queen Angel alone with no other fish other then maybe some small clown fish colonies within the live rock...
edit..
sorry I meant Blueface Angelfish. I thought they were the same species.
Is a 80-90 gall enough?
 

ccampbell57

Active Member
Originally Posted by toodle
Whats the smallest tank size to house a Queen Angel alone with no other fish other then maybe some small clown fish colonies within the live rock...
edit..
sorry I meant Blueface Angelfish. I thought they were the same species.
Is a 80-90 gall enough?
No a 90 gallon is not big enough. Angels need at least a 72" tank. It may be able to house a queen when it is a juvi but when it gets to 5" it will need a 180 minimum.
 

toodle

New Member
Another site I see selling marine fish says 100 gallon is enough.
What does a 10" fish need 180 gall tank for alone?
Quick Stats: Blueface Angelfish
Family: Pomacanthidae
Range: Indian and Pacific Oceans
Size: Up to 15 inches
Diet: Omnivore
Tank Set-up: Marine: Coral or rock, plants
Reef Compatible: With caution
Tank Conditions: 72-78ºF; sg 1.020-1.025; pH 8.1-8.4
Minimum Tank Capacity: 100 gallon
Light: High
Temperament: Semi-aggressive
Swimming Level: No specific level
Care Level: Moderate
Reproduction: Egg Scatterer
 

ccampbell57

Active Member
Originally Posted by toodle
Another site I see selling marine fish says 100 gallon is enough.
What does a 10" fish need 180 gall tank for alone?
Quick Stats: Blueface Angelfish
Family: Pomacanthidae
Range: Indian and Pacific Oceans
Size: Up to 15 inches
Diet: Omnivore
Tank Set-up: Marine: Coral or rock, plants
Reef Compatible: With caution
Tank Conditions: 72-78ºF; sg 1.020-1.025; pH 8.1-8.4
Minimum Tank Capacity: 100 gallon
Light: High
Temperament: Semi-aggressive
Swimming Level: No specific level
Care Level: Moderate
Reproduction: Egg Scatterer
A blueface is different. This is a smaller angel than the queen. You can see that the blueface still gets up to 15". The rule of thumb is that your tank should be at least 6x the length of your fish for adequate swimming. A 125 should hold a Blueface by itself, but it would have to be a long 125.
I am not one to tell anyone to put a large fish in a minimum size tank. I have a blueface and an emperor in a 180 currently and know that in a couple of years I will need to place them in a 300-500 gallon tank.
Also, all angels are very touchy fish and need to be placed in a tank that has been up and running for at least 6-8 months.
 

ccampbell57

Active Member
Also, fish stores are out to sell fish. They understand that not very many people in the aquarist hobby have the size tanks required to adequately hold an angel or most large fish. So they give a bogus tank size.
 
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