🚚 Dry goods ship Australia-wide 🐠 Livestock — buy online, collect in store 🧪 In-store water analysis
Home  /  Fish profiles  /  Lieutenant Tang
Lieutenant Tang (Acanthurus tennentii)

Lieutenant Tang

Acanthurus tennentii
Family
Tang / Surgeonfish
Care level
Intermediate
Temperament
Semi-aggressive
Reef safe
Reef safe
Max size
25 cm
Min tank
475 L · 125 gal
Origin
Indian Ocean / Indo-Pacific
Diet
Herbivore
Food
Nori, Marine algae, Spirulina, Herbivore pellets, Mysis

Overview

The Lieutenant Tang (Acanthurus tennentii) — also called the Tennenti Tang or Doubleband Surgeonfish — is a sophisticated, understated surgeonfish that experienced reefers tend to fall for. It skips the loud colours of a Powder Blue or Clown Tang in favour of a smooth matte tan-to-olive body with a dark outline, blue highlights along the tail, and its namesake pair of black bars behind the eye that look just like a lieutenant's rank insignia (some see vampire fangs — hence its other nickname).

As it matures it develops an elegant lyre-shaped tail with trailing tips, and juveniles often carry a yellow tinge that fades with age. It's a hardworking algae grazer and, importantly, one of the more even-tempered large Acanthurus — relatively peaceful for the genus, if still no pushover.

We rate it intermediate mainly on account of its adult size, its need for serious swimming room and strong flow, and the usual tang susceptibility to parasites. Give it the space and water quality it wants and it's a graceful, long-lived centrepiece that earns its keep keeping your rockwork clean.

Compatibility

For an Acanthurus, the Lieutenant Tang is comparatively easygoing — it's peaceful toward dissimilar tankmates and generally isn't a troublemaker in a community. The exception is its own kind: like most tangs it can be territorial toward other surgeonfish, especially those of the same genus or a similar body shape and colour. As a rule, keep one per tank.

It mixes well with wrasses, anthias, larger angels, and tangs from other genera such as Zebrasoma or Naso. If you do want to run multiple tangs, add them all at once (or very close together) in a large system so no single fish claims the territory first. Take care with the sharp caudal scalpel when netting or working in the tank, and give it open swimming lanes to keep any squabbling to a minimum.

Health & quarantine

Like all tangs, the Lieutenant lacks a heavy body-slime coat and is prone to marine ich and other parasites, particularly through the stress of collection and acclimation. A proper quarantine period and a slow, unhurried acclimation are strongly recommended and greatly improve long-term success. This is a seaward-reef and surge-zone fish, so it also demands strong, well-oxygenated flow and pristine, stable water — good filtration, a decent skimmer and plenty of movement all help. Cleaner shrimp and cleaner wrasses make useful allies, and a varied, algae-rich diet supports its immune system while guarding against head-and-lateral-line erosion (HLLE).

Frequently asked questions

How big does the Lieutenant Tang get, and what tank does it need?
It reaches around 25 cm, occasionally larger. A juvenile can start in roughly 475 litres, but a full-grown adult will be far happier in 680 litres or more. Think long and open — swimming length matters more than height for this active fish.
Is it reef safe?
Yes, fully. It's a herbivore that won't harm corals or invertebrates and actually benefits a reef by grazing algae off the rocks. Keep it well-fed with greens so it stays focused on algae.
Can I keep it with other tangs?
Only with care. It's territorial toward other surgeonfish, especially similar-shaped or same-genus species. One per tank is safest; if mixing tangs, use a large system and add them all together to spread out the aggression.
Why is water flow such a big deal for this fish?
It naturally lives on seaward reefs and surge zones with highly oxygenated water. Strong, turbulent flow and good oxygenation keep it healthy and settled — weak or stagnant water is a common reason active tangs decline.
Do I need to quarantine it?
Strongly recommended. Tangs are among the more ich-prone marine fish, and the acclimation period is the riskiest window. Quarantine lets you observe, treat if needed, and get it feeding confidently before it joins your display — protecting both the tang and your other fish.
Is the Lieutenant Tang aggressive?
It's semi-aggressive but relatively mild-mannered for a large Acanthurus. It's usually peaceful with dissimilar tankmates and saves its attitude for other tangs. Give it space, add it thoughtfully, and keep it well-fed to keep the peace.

Care guidance is drawn from our own experience — every fish is an individual, so treat it as a starting point, not a guarantee. Not sure if a species suits your tank? Come ask us in store. New to the terms? Read the care-terms glossary.