Acanthurus sohal — Sohal Surgeonfish
- Who it’s for: advanced hobbyists with large tanks and experience keeping territorial fish.
- Size: up to ~40 cm TL in the wild; still a very large surgeonfish in any aquarium.
- Real diet: herbivore–detritivore focused on constant grazing.
- Compatibility: low with other surgeonfish and fish of similar body shape.
- Difficulty: high — not due to fragility, but aggression, space requirements, and social management.
Acanthurus sohal is one of the most spectacular surgeonfish in the hobby… and one of the most misunderstood. It rarely fails because of water parameters. It fails because of a conceptual error: placing a fish designed to patrol and dominate exposed reef zones into a system without space, social structure, or margin. This profile is built to separate admiration from reality.
01 — Introduction
Introduction
Online, the Sohal is often described as «a beautiful but aggressive surgeonfish.» That’s true — but incomplete. In reality, it’s an exposed-reef fish: highly active, strongly territorial, and with a clear tendency to escalate conflict when it perceives competition for space, swimming lanes, or grazing resources.
In a well-designed aquarium, it can become the dominant fish and remain impressive for years. In an inadequate or poorly planned system, it can turn the entire tank into an environment of constant harassment. That’s why this species cannot be evaluated by litres alone — it must be assessed by usable volume, swimming length, oxygenation, visual structure, and social strategy.
Experience — «The Sohal isn’t difficult because it’s fragile. It’s difficult because it demands the entire system be up to its level.»
02 — Taxonomy
Identification & Taxonomy
| Field | Practical data | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Scientific name | Acanthurus sohal (Forsskål, 1775) | Family Acanthuridae. |
| Common names | Sohal surgeonfish, Sohal tang | Widely recognized by the name «Sohal». |
| Maximum size | ~40 cm TL | In the wild it reaches a clearly non-domestic size. |
| Distribution | Red Sea and NW Indian Ocean / Arabian Peninsula | Associated with exposed reefs and wave-swept zones. |
| Temperament | Very aggressive and territorial | Not an exaggerated reputation — it’s a core part of its ecology. |
03 — Habitat
Natural Habitat & Ecology
The Sohal inhabits reef edges and shallow exposed zones swept by wave action, where it patrols surfaces with algal growth and constant traffic from other herbivores. This has two direct consequences in captivity: it needs high oxygenation and large swimming space, and it interprets its environment as a map of defensible territory.
Experience — «Most reef fish use space. The Sohal manages it.»
04 — Tank Setup
Recommended Tank Configurations
What works
- Long tanks with clear swimming lanes and open return areas.
- Structured rockwork that breaks line-of-sight without restricting movement.
- High gas exchange, vigorous flow, and well-oxygenated water.
- Thoughtful introduction order — rarely advisable to add it early if more surgeonfishes will follow.
What tends to fail
- «Just-enough» tanks with the hope it «grows more slowly».
- Dense, broken décor that forces constant turning.
- Combinations with multiple dominant Acanthurus in limited space.
- Counting on aggression dropping with more food.
Setting up a large reef and want to understand the system before choosing the species?
05 — Parameters
Water Parameters
| Parameter | Practical range | AtlasReef note |
|---|---|---|
| Temperature | 24–27 °C | Stability > chasing the perfect number. |
| Salinity | 1.024–1.026 sg | Standard reef — avoid sudden swings. |
| pH | 8.0–8.4 | A well-aerated system usually helps more than additives. |
| Nitrate | < 15–20 mg/L | The real goal is stability with high oxygenation. |
| Phosphate | Low, not zero | A large herbivore doesn’t thrive in a «sterilized» reef. |
| Flow | High | Especially important given this fish’s behaviour and physiology. |
Worked / Didn’t work — keeping a stable Sohal
- Solid routine of water changes and nutrient export.
- Agitated surface and strong water movement with no dead zones.
- Introducing the fish into a mature, socially planned system.
- Adding it to a young tank «because it’s healthy and eating».
- Compensating for low volume with more rock or more food.
- Trying to fix social stress by tweaking water numbers alone.
06 — Feeding
Feeding
Like other surgeonfish, the Sohal is primarily herbivorous and spends much of the day grazing. In captivity, this should translate into multiple plant-based offerings, frequent access to nori, and quality food with a high vegetable component — plus reasonable protein support without turning the diet into a carnivore feast.
Recommended base diet
- Nori / dried seaweed on a clip daily.
- Granules and pellets with a high plant profile.
- Areas of the tank with usable algal film.
- Enough variety to avoid a drop in body condition.
What a good diet prevents
- Drop in body condition and coloration.
- Increased irritability from food competition.
- Poorer adaptation after introduction or relocation.
07 — Compatibility
Real-World Compatibility
The Sohal’s compatibility cannot be summarised as «semi-aggressive» or «aggressive.» You need to think in terms of ecological rivalry. It tolerates fish of different body shapes and niches better than disc-shaped, active, herbivorous fish. Its worst context is sharing a tank with other strong-willed surgeonfishes in a small space.
Experience — «The problem isn’t adding another large fish. The problem is adding a fish the Sohal reads as a legitimate competitor.»
08 — Health vs Stress
Comparison: Health, Stress & Visual Reading
| Signal | Sohal in good condition | Compromised Sohal |
|---|---|---|
| Coloration | Intense contrast and clean pattern | Dull, diffuse, or «washed-out» look |
| Body profile | Robust, no visible hollowing | Marked flanks, loss of mass |
| Swimming | Fluid, decisive, in control of the environment | Erratic, tense, or excessively reactive |
| Interactions | Stable dominance or watchful coexistence | Repetitive chasing without let-up |
09 — AtlasReef BCI
AtlasReef BCI — Body Condition Index
BCI 1–2 · critical
Sunken profile, poor colour, less confident swimming, and tense feeding response. In a Sohal, this state is rarely «just food» — it often involves social stress or an inadequate system.
BCI 3 · acceptable but monitored
The fish eats, patrols, and maintains a reasonable shape, but has yet to project the sense of mass, shine, and control typical of a well-settled specimen.
BCI 4 · real target
Full body, strong coloration, stable activity, and dominant behaviour without visible pathological wear. This is the point you want to sustain.
10 — Myths vs Facts
Myths vs Facts
| Myth | AtlasReef fact |
|---|---|
| «If it goes in small, it’ll adapt to any tank.» | Growing up small doesn’t mean living well — it just makes the system’s compromise chronic. |
| «If it eats nori, everything is sorted.» | Diet helps, but it doesn’t fix space, hierarchy, or social design. |
| «More rock means less aggression.» | Only if the rock breaks sightlines without stealing swimming lanes. Badly placed rock can make things worse. |
| «It’s like other big tangs, just a bit harder.» | No. The Sohal has a specific reputation for a reason — its aggression can escalate faster and further. |
11 — Compatibility Matrix
Compatibility Matrix
| Group | Risk | Quick read |
|---|---|---|
| Other Acanthurus surgeonfishes | Very high | Direct competition — maximum risk combination in home aquaria. |
| Zebrasoma / other visible tangs | High | Can work only in genuinely large, well-planned systems. |
| Large angelfish | Medium | Depends on the individual and volume — not identical rivals, but strong-presence fish. |
| Active wrasses | Medium-low | Usually coexist better by occupying different dynamics. |
| Small peaceful fish | Variable | Not always attacked, but may live under the shadow of an excessive dominant. |
12 — Buying Guide
Buying Guide
- Look for a specimen with clean coloration, correct belly profile, and confident swimming.
- Observe not just whether it eats, but how it eats: decisiveness, speed, and control.
- Reject individuals showing laboured breathing, frayed edges, or extreme nervous behaviour.
- Don’t buy the fish and then plan the system — with this species, the order matters.
13 — Risk Estimator
AtlasReef Estimator — Real Risk with Acanthurus sohal
| Factor | If it occurs in your tank… | Impact | Recommended action |
|---|---|---|---|
| Short or tight tank | Constant turning, repeated chasing, territorial tension | Very high | Rethink the species or project — there’s rarely a «fine tune» that fixes this. |
| More than one dominant tang | Constant competition for lanes and grazing surface | Very high | Reduce direct rivals or significantly raise system margin. |
| Poor visual structure | Straight-line chasing across the entire tank | High | Break sightlines and redesign flow without strangling swimming space. |
| Insufficient plant diet | Low BCI, increased irritability, poorer adaptation | Medium-high | Increase useful artificial grazing and feeding regularity. |
| Poor oxygenation | Tense activity, reduced physiological margin | Medium | Improve flow, surface agitation, gas exchange, and maintenance. |
14 — Glossary
Quick Glossary
Territoriality
The tendency to defend lanes, surfaces, or usage zones from perceived competitors.
BCI
Body Condition Index: visual reading of mass, shape, energy, and fish consistency.
Grazing
Repeated feeding behaviour on biofilm, algae, and hard surfaces.
Biological margin
The system’s capacity to absorb errors without social or chemical collapse.
Ecological rivalry
Conflict between species occupying similar niches even if not identical.
Oxygenation
Actual oxygen availability and efficiency of gas exchange in the system.
15 — Breeding
Captive Breeding
Controlled reproduction of the Sohal in a home aquarium is not part of normal hobbyist maintenance. Like other surgeonfish, its reproductive biology is tied to space, synchrony, group behaviour, and conditions far beyond the typical home setting.
16 — Health
Health, Stress & Most Likely Pathologies
The main problem isn’t exotic — it’s stress
Like other surgeonfish, it can be sensitive to marine ich, transport deterioration, condition loss, and opportunistic complications when adaptation occurs in a socially poor or physiologically inadequate system.
Early warning signs that matter
- More pronounced breathing than normal.
- «Washed-out» coloration or a less full body.
- Pathological chasing without rest.
- Food accepted, but with less control and less confidence.
17 — Common Mistakes
Most Common Mistakes
- Choosing it for aesthetics without building a system suited to its behaviour.
- Adding it too early to the tank’s social hierarchy.
- Underestimating the difference between «aggressive» and «structural dominant».
- Interpreting chronic chasing as «just tang stuff».
- Thinking more food or more rock substitutes for more margin.
Experience — «With a Sohal, the aquarium isn’t improvised — it’s designed.»
18 — Scientific Evidence
Scientific Evidence & Useful Sources
A selection of references and resources for this profile. The practical value here isn’t to memorise papers — it’s to reinforce one idea: aggression, grazing, and exposed habitat are not footnotes; they are the core of this species.
Species ecology & biology
Territorial behaviour
Distribution & out-of-range records
19 — Further Reading
Further Reading
20 — FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions
Is it a good surgeonfish for beginners?
No. It can be fascinating, but it’s not a starter species. It requires real volume, social judgement, and the ability to say «no» to attractive but bad combinations.
Can it be mixed with other tangs?
Sometimes yes, but not as a general rule. The risk is high and depends heavily on system size, introduction order, and ecological rivalry.
What matters more — food or space?
Both matter, but space wins. A great diet doesn’t fix a socially impossible project.
Does it become less aggressive over time?
You shouldn’t count on it. It may settle, but its territorial base will still be there. The system must account for that from day one.
The Sohal offers a very useful lesson for any hobbyist: some fish can’t be domesticated by habit — they demand the system be properly designed from the start. When you understand that, you improve not just with this species, but with everything in your tank.
AtlasReefClosing
Closing
Acanthurus sohal is not just a spectacular fish — it’s a test of maturity as a hobbyist. If your system can genuinely sustain it, it can probably support smarter decisions with many other species too. If it can’t, the right choice is not to «try your luck» but to respect the biology before the desire.
Images: AtlasReef Media Library (original/AI-generated, rights-free).
