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Sailfin Tang - Pacific (Zebrasoma velifer)

Sailfin Tang - Pacific

Zebrasoma velifer
Family
Tang / Surgeonfish
Care level
Intermediate
Temperament
Semi-aggressive
Reef safe
Reef safe
Max size
40 cm
Min tank
680 L · 180 gal
Origin
Indo-Pacific
Diet
Herbivore
Food
Nori, Marine algae, Spirulina, Herbivore pellets, Mysis

Overview

The Pacific Sailfin Tang (Zebrasoma velifer) is one of the most impressive tangs in the hobby, named for the enormous sail-like dorsal and anal fins it can raise to nearly double its apparent size. Its oval, brownish body is crossed by bold vertical bands packed with fine markings, its nose is freckled, and its tail carries yellow-to-blue tones — a striking, ever-changing display fish. It's the Pacific counterpart of the Red Sea Sailfin (Zebrasoma desjardinii), which it's often confused with.

It's also one of the hardest-working algae grazers you can keep, happily mowing through film algae and even nuisance growth that other fish leave alone.

The honest headline is size: this is one of the largest commonly available tangs, reaching around 40 cm, so it's very much a fish for a big, established system. It's reasonably hardy once settled, which earns it an intermediate rating — but the space, flow and diet requirements mean it's a considered purchase, not an impulse one.

Compatibility

Toward most tankmates the Sailfin is bold but peaceable, and it mixes well with a wide range of community fish — wrasses, gobies, blennies, anthias, clownfish and most reef-safe species. Where it shows its temper is with its own kind and lookalikes: it's territorial toward other Sailfins, other Zebrasoma, and tangs of similar size or shape, and for a Zebrasoma it sits toward the feistier end.

Keep one Sailfin per tank as the rule. If you want to mix tangs, do it in a large system, add similar species together (never one to an established tang), and lean on different genera and body shapes to spread aggression. It raises those big fins and flashes its scalpel in disputes, so take care when netting, and avoid pairing it with very aggressive triggers or overcrowding multiple Acanthurus.

Health & quarantine

The Pacific Sailfin is among the hardier tangs once properly acclimated, but it carries the usual surgeonfish caveats. It lacks a heavy slime coat and is prone to marine ich and velvet, especially through the stress of collection and introduction, so a proper quarantine (a couple of weeks minimum) and a slow acclimation are strongly recommended. It also needs a genuinely mature tank — ideally running six months or more — with pristine, stable, highly oxygenated water; provide strong surface agitation, good flow and a decent skimmer. Support it with cleaner shrimp or wrasses and a varied, algae-rich diet, which keeps colour vivid and guards against head-and-lateral-line erosion (HLLE). Well cared for, it's long-lived, often a decade or more.

Frequently asked questions

How big does the Pacific Sailfin Tang get, and what tank does it need?
It's a large tang, reaching around 40 cm — one of the biggest commonly kept. We'd treat roughly 680 litres as a working minimum, with bigger genuinely better for a fish that swims constantly. Long, open swimming space matters more than tank height. Buy it for the tank you're prepared to provide long term.
Is it reef safe?
Yes, fully. As a herbivore it won't harm corals or invertebrates and actively benefits a reef by grazing algae — it's prized for tackling film algae and even some nuisance growth. Keep it well-fed with greens so it stays focused on algae.
Can I keep it with other tangs?
With care. It's territorial toward its own kind, other Zebrasoma and similar-shaped tangs. One Sailfin per tank is safest; if mixing tangs, use a large system, add similar species together, and combine different genera and shapes to reduce conflict.
Why does it fan out those big fins?
That's the 'sailfin' in action. It raises its oversized dorsal and anal fins as a threat display to look larger when confronting rivals or feeling threatened. It's completely normal behaviour and one of the most impressive sights this fish offers.
Do I need to quarantine it?
Strongly recommended. Tangs are among the more ich- and velvet-prone marine fish, and the acclimation period is the riskiest window. A quarantine of at least two weeks lets you observe, treat if needed, and get it feeding confidently on an algae-rich diet before it joins your display.
Is it a good algae eater?
One of the best. Sailfins are enthusiastic grazers with a real appetite for film and filamentous algae, and many keepers add them partly for that reason. Just don't rely on tank algae alone — supplement with Nori and prepared greens so the fish stays properly nourished.

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.