www.fgks.org   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

 
Photo: Queen angelfish swimming near a reef

The queen angelfish gets its name from the crown-like ring on its head. Its diet consists mostly of sponges and algae.

Photograph courtesy Chris Huss/NOAA

Map

Map: Angelfish range

Queen Angelfish Range

Audio

Fast Facts

Type:
Fish
Diet:
Omnivore
Average life span in the wild:
Up to 15 years
Size:
Up to 18 in (45 cm)
Weight:
Up to 3.5 lbs (1.6 kg)
Group name:
School
Did you know?
Young queen angelfish feed by setting up cleaning stations in sea grass where larger fish come to have their skin parasites removed.
Size relative to a 6-ft (2-m) man:
Illustration: Angelfish compared with adult man

Queen angelfish get their royal title from the speckled, blue-ringed black spot on their heads that resembles a crown.

Decked out with electric blue bodies, blazing yellow tails, and light purple and orange highlights, Queen angels are among the most strikingly colorful of all reef fishes. Their adornments seem shockingly conspicuous, but they blend well when hiding amid the exotic reef colors.

They are shy fish, found either alone or often in pairs in the warm waters of the Caribbean and western Atlantic. Fairly large for reef-dwellers, they can grow up to 18 inches (45 centimeters) in length. They have rounded heads and small beak-like mouths, and, like other angelfish, their long upper and lower fins stream dramatically behind them.

Their diet consists almost entirely of sponges and algae, but they will also nibble on sea fans, soft corals, and even jellyfish.

Queen angels are close relatives of the equally striking blue angelfish. In fact, these two species are known to mate, forming natural hybrids, a very rare occurrence among angelfish.

They are widely harvested for the aquarium trade, but are common throughout their range and have no special protections or status.

Fish Features

  • Photo: Close-up of a man with a giant catfish

    Megafishes Photos

    View photos of the world's largest freshwater fish fighting for survival, as pollution, overfishing, and construction threaten the rivers and lakes they call home.

  • Photo: A blue-and-green sea anemone

    All About the Ocean

    Explore and discover the world's oceans like never before with facts, photos, news, video, and more!

  • Photo: Great white shark and fish

    Great White Shark Pictures

    See close-ups of great white sharks lurking, hunting, and attacking. Download desktop wallpapers of these amazing, often misunderstood predators.

  • Photo: Swedish net that captures numbers of eels

    Eels Photo Gallery

    The freshwater eel is one of the few fishes to spawn in the ocean and spend its adulthood in lakes, rivers, and estuaries.

Animals

From the Magazine

  1. Photo: Two adult preen, Ireland

    Gannets Pictures

    Champion divers but clumsy landers, doting parents but hostile neighbors—northern gannets abound in contradictions.

  2. Photo: Silent Ural owl

    Estonia's Ural Owls

    Photographer Sven Začek provides an intimate view of this large raptor.