Brown Tang
Zebrasoma scopas
Brown Tang (Zebrasoma scopas) is a common reef-associated surgeonfish from the Indo-Pacific, often seen grazing algae on shallow reefs and lagoons. It is not a typical food or target species for anglers, but it may be collected for the aquarium trade in some regions.

Identification points
- Oval, disk-like body with a narrow snout typical of a tang
- Brown to olive body with fine pale bluish lines or reticulation, often variable in intensity
- Small scalpel spine on the caudal peduncle and a pale, sometimes darker-edged tail fin
Habitat
Coral reefs, reef flats, lagoon edges, and clear coastal waters with abundant benthic algae, usually from shallow water down to moderate reef depths.
Bait notes
Not a standard sportfish; it is generally not targeted with bait. If collected, algae-based foods, nori, and small natural grazeable items are more relevant than fish baits.
Behavior
Primarily a daytime grazer that continually picks filamentous algae and detritus from rock and coral surfaces; it is wary, highly territorial around feeding areas, and uses its laterally compressed body to maneuver through reef structure.
Caution
Reef collection may be regulated or restricted locally; check aquarium-trade and marine-protected-area rules. As a reef fish, it is not a typical food species and is usually of interest for viewing or aquarium use rather than consumption.
Fishing notes
No practical angling fishery. Where collection is legal, use gentle netting or capture methods suited to reef fish handling rather than hook-and-line; minimize stress and reef damage.