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Watanabei Angel (Genicanthus watanabei)

Watanabei Angel

Genicanthus watanabei
Family
Angelfish (Swallowtail)
Care level
Intermediate
Temperament
Peaceful
Reef safe
Reef safe
Max size
15 cm
Min tank
450 L · 119 gal
Origin
Western Pacific
Diet
Planktivore
Food
Mysis, Enriched brine, Marine plankton, Spirulina, Angelfish preparations

Overview

The Watanabei Angel (Genicanthus watanabei) — also called the Blackedged or Watanabe's Lyretail Angelfish — is one of the genuine prizes for a reef keeper who wants an angelfish. It's a swallowtail angel: an elegant, iridescent pale-blue fish with trailing lyre-shaped tail lobes. Males carry fine black horizontal stripes across the lower body and a single orange streak toward the tail, while females are cleaner blue with dark-edged fins — one of the few angels you can reliably sex on sight.

Best of all, Genicanthus angels are the only truly reef-safe angelfish in the hobby. Because they feed on plankton in the water column rather than grazing corals, they leave your soft corals, LPS, SPS and clams alone — the holy grail for anyone who's wanted an angel in a coral tank.

The honest catch is that it's a deep-water fish, and that shapes everything about buying and settling it. We rate it intermediate: peaceful, hardy and long-lived once established, but only if you start with a properly collected, healthy specimen and give it the right introduction.

Compatibility

The Watanabei is a genuinely peaceful, non-confrontational fish — unusually so for an angel. It generally leaves other fish alone, and it even coexists with angels from other genera (Pomacanthus, Centropyge and the like), which is rare in this family. That gentle nature also means it can be intimidated by boisterous tankmates, so peaceful-to-moderate company suits it best.

You can keep it singly, as a male-female pair, or as one male with several females in a large tank — but never two males, which will fight. Compatibility with other Genicanthus is variable, so mix swallowtails only with care and add any group together. One quirk to note: a Watanabei will occasionally chase smaller, docile planktivores such as anthias, since they compete for the same food and water column.

Health & quarantine

This is the crux of keeping a Watanabei. It's collected from deep water, so the biggest risk is decompression and swim-bladder damage during capture — a fish that wasn't handled correctly may show buoyancy problems, a swollen abdomen, or swim awkwardly at the surface. The single most important step is to buy a properly decompressed, healthy specimen that's alert and already feeding (young females tend to adapt best). Give it a dimly lit tank at first, as deep-water fish are sensitive to bright aquarium lighting, and a slow, low-stress acclimation. Genicanthus are also intolerant of ammonia and nitrite spikes, so a mature, stable, pristine system is essential; they even appreciate slightly cooler water. Started right, the Watanabei heals, settles and becomes a hardy, long-lived fish that can reach around 15 years.

Frequently asked questions

Is the Watanabei Angel really reef safe?
Yes — genuinely. Genicanthus swallowtail angels are the only truly reef-safe angelfish, because they eat plankton rather than grazing corals. The Watanabei won't harm soft corals, LPS, SPS or clams, which makes it one of the few angels you can confidently add to a full coral reef.
Why is careful sourcing so important for this fish?
It's collected from deep water, so it's prone to decompression and swim-bladder problems if not brought up and handled properly. A poorly collected fish may struggle with buoyancy and rarely recovers. Buy a properly decompressed, alert specimen that's already eating — ideally a young female — and your odds of long-term success climb dramatically.
Can I keep more than one?
Yes, as a male-female pair or one male with several females, in a large enough tank and added together. Never keep two males, as they'll fight. Mixing it with other swallowtail species is variable, so do that only cautiously.
Can I tell males from females?
Unusually for an angel, yes. Males are pale blue with fine black horizontal striping on the lower body and an orange streak toward the tail; females are cleaner blue with dark-edged fins and little striping. This makes pairing them much easier than most angelfish.
What tank setup does it need?
A mature, stable reef of at least around 450 litres with lots of open swimming space plus live rock caves for refuge. Keep the lighting dimmer at first to mimic its deep-water home, maintain pristine water (it won't tolerate ammonia or nitrite spikes), and slightly cooler temperatures suit it well.
Is it a good beginner angelfish?
It's peaceful and reef-safe, which is appealing, but the deep-water collection risk and need for pristine, stable water make it better suited to an intermediate keeper with an established system. If you start with a healthy, feeding, well-collected specimen and give it a careful introduction, it's very rewarding.

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.