strigosus tang and truncatus tang in 80 gallon

aaron1129

New member
Would a kole eyed tang and a bristletooth tang be able to get along in a 80 gallon 48''x24'' aquarium.

If so, what would a successful stock procedure look like, same time or one before the other, if so which first, ect...
 
The Kole Tang is a type of bristle tooth tang. Tangs under the Ctenochaetus genus are referred as bristle tooths. Generally 2 tangs from the same genus in a small space can result in aggression. Depending on species, specimen size, initial health, stress, tank size, diet, aquascape, stocking order, and other factors
 
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The Kole Tang is a type of bristle tooth tang. Tangs under the Ctenochaetus genus are referred as bristle tooths. Generally 2 tangs from the same genus in a small space can result in aggression. Depending on species, specimen size, initial health, stress, tank size, diet, aquascape, stocking order, and other factors

That makes sense, would a scopas tang, since it is a different genus, be a better possibility or would it be better to not risk it at all? last thing I want to do is watch a two fish fight to death.
 
Well most people would probably say a Scopas gets too big for a 80 gallon, 4 foot tank. You could though. I mean you could even try two bristle tooth tangs and see if you get lucky. A lot of things in this hobby seem to be calculated risks haha. Just consider all the variables.

I would love to have a Tomini Tang.. I already have 5 tangs in my tank, not wanting to push it further
 
Would a kole eyed tang and a bristletooth tang be able to get along in a 80 gallon 48''x24'' aquarium.



If so, what would a successful stock procedure look like, same time or one before the other, if so which first, ect...



No. Putting two tangs of the same genus requires at least 180 gallons.
 
Good advice above. Pick one Ctenochaetus tang. The truncatus you mentioned is the prettiest, IMO.

For the other bigger fish look into wrasses or dwarf angels
 
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