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Queen Angelfish

Holacanthus ciliaris

Queen Angelfish is a brilliant reef angelfish of the Caribbean and western Atlantic, best known for its blue body, yellow fins, and dark “crown” patch on the forehead. It browses sponges and algae on shallow coral reefs and is often wary around divers and anglers.

Saltwater
Queen Angelfish reference image
Pauline Walsh Jacobson, cc-by, via Wikimedia Commons. Source: Wikimedia Commons.

Identification points

  • Bright blue body with vivid yellow dorsal, anal, and tail fins.
  • Dark vertical band over the forehead forming the species' distinctive 'crown'.
  • Small orange-yellow pectoral area and blue-edged scales giving a jeweled appearance.

Habitat

Shallow coral and rocky reefs, reef slopes, patch reefs, and clear lagoon habitats from about 1-70 m deep, especially where sponges and hiding crevices are abundant.

Bait notes

Not a standard game fish and is rarely targeted by anglers. If collected for aquarium use, it is most often taken with small crustaceans or marine sponge-based feeds in captivity; hook-and-line capture is generally not recommended.

Behavior

Primarily a daytime grazer that picks sponges, tunicates, algae, and small benthic invertebrates from reef structure. Adults are usually solitary or in pairs and are territorial around favored reef patches.

Caution

Reef-associated species may be subject to local harvest or collection restrictions, so check regulations before any take. Do not eat unless local advisories confirm safety; reef fish can carry ciguatera risk in some areas.

Fishing notes

Avoid fishing for this species on reefs; it is better observed than targeted. In areas where collection is legal, very light tackle and extreme care are needed, but most encounters should be treated as catch-and-release or non-target bycatch.