Yellow tangs, primarily found in the reefs of the Pacific Ocean, face predation from various marine animals, including larger fish such as groupers and moray eels. They may also be vulnerable to certain species of sharks and barracudas. Additionally, juvenile yellow tangs can be at risk from smaller predatory fish. Their vibrant coloration and ability to quickly dart into crevices help them evade many potential threats.
Yellow Tangs natural habitat is shallow reefs in the Indian and western Pacific oceans
In the ocean.
by eating
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.
To find the fraction of all fish in the aquarium that are yellow tangs, you multiply the fraction of surgeonfish that are yellow tangs by the fraction of all fish that are surgeonfish. So, (3/4) * (2/5) = 6/20 = 3/10. Therefore, 3/10 of all fish in the aquarium are yellow tangs.
Yes, because of poachers
Saltwater :)
no they do not they have no real enemies
No, they are common fish.
They are saltwater fish. Tangs are pretty hardy too. The yellow tangs are the most common. They can all live in a saltwater aquarium as long as you keep up the tank properly. Tangs can get aggresive so only have one tang at a time as they will fight each other.
no. they are yellow to let their predators know they are poisoins
it gets a nice little romantic spot in the pond and then me mum says im cool