Want this question answered?
Regal or commonly called blue tang can grow up to a foot long. At this time we do not have the ability to breed dwarf blue tangs.
Regal tangs get about 12" long.
There are 72 different species of Tangs in the ocean. They are classified based on their feeding guilds.
In the ocean.
Yellow Tangs natural habitat is shallow reefs in the Indian and western Pacific oceans
http://animal-world.com/encyclo/marine/tangs/BlueTang.php this should have what you are looking for
No. Not in the traditional definition of the tropical tank. A tropical tank is a freshwater aquarium. Regal Tangs are saltwater fish and go in a saltwater tank (marine aquarium).
Yes they do.
regal tangs feed on zooplankton, marine animals, brine or chopped shrimp and algae. They're favourite is zooplankton. Adults enjoy algae more than juvenilles.
Saltwater fish as fish that live in water with a salinity of higher degree than brackish water, such as fish from the ocean. Clownfish (Nemo), Tangs (Dory), Tuna (Charlie) are commonly known saltwater fish.
None of the tangs commonly called Blue Tang - Powder Blue, Atlantic Blue, and Regal/Hippo/Blue(Paracanthurus hepatus - are on the endangered species list. So the answer is never.
A Pacific blue tang, commonly called a Dory fish from the Disney move "Finding Nemo," can typically be kept with a Hawaiian yellow tang. Yellow tangs can be aggressive towards other tangs with similar round body shapes. Since blue tangs have an elongated body, yellow tangs do not consider them a threat. Some tangs require a large aquarium; yellow tangs can grow to over 7 inches in length while blue tangs can grow up to 12 inches long. Juvenile blue tangs can be kept in smaller tanks up to 75 gallons but as they grow and mature they should be moved into larger aquariums.