Coral beauty angelfish are the practical choice for reef keepers who want an angelfish but don't have 180 gallons for a large angel. Centropyge bispinosa stays under 4 inches, grazes on algae, and brings the dramatic angelfish silhouette to saltwater fish tanks a fraction of the size needed for its larger relatives.
We cover the real risks alongside the rewards for this species, including the coral nipping behavior that gets this fish removed from saltwater reefs after it settles in.
Coral beauties rank as a moderate-difficulty species. Our best beginner saltwater fish guide covers why they require a 70-gallon minimum and how they compare to easier first-choice species.
Coral beauty natural habitat: Indo-Pacific reef slopes at 5–45 meters
Coral beauty angelfish range widely across the Indo-Pacific, from the Red Sea and East Africa through the Philippines, Micronesia, and south to the Great Barrier Reef. They inhabit coral-rich reef slopes and lagoons at 5–45 meters depth, typically in areas with abundant algae growth and rubble substrate.
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Wild coral beauties are haremic: one male presides over a territory containing 2–5 females. In captivity, this social structure doesn't need to be replicated, but it explains why two coral beauties in a tank will establish a dominance hierarchy immediately.
Coral beauty tank setup: 70 gallons minimum with hiding structure
Before filling a 70-gallon for a coral beauty, complete the full setup and cycling process. Our beginner saltwater tank setup guide covers the equipment list and nitrogen cycle timeline that applies to any marine system at this size.
A 70-gallon tank with substantial live rock architecture gives a coral beauty enough territory to roam and enough hiding structure to feel secure. Unlike tangs, coral beauties don't need extensive open swimming corridors.
They spend their time working the rock face, grazing film algae and picking small invertebrates.
The live rock arrangement matters. Coral beauties need caves, overhangs, and crevices to retreat to when threatened.
A tank with live rock stacked in a flat wall provides less usable territory than the same amount of rock arranged in a more three-dimensional structure.
Our live rock guide covers how to build a three-dimensional aquascape with caves and overhangs before filling the tank, which is the best time to get the structure right for a coral beauty.
Coral beauty water parameters: tolerant but not neglect-proof
Coral beauty angelfish are among the more tolerant dwarf angels regarding water quality. They handle moderate nitrate levels that would stress a tang or mandarin, but they're not immune to chronic water quality neglect.
| Parameter | Target | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Temperature | 74–80°F | Stable temperature reduces disease risk |
| Salinity (SG) | 1.022–1.025 | Natural seawater range |
| pH | 8.1–8.4 | Standard reef target |
| Ammonia/Nitrite | 0 ppm | Tank must be fully cycled |
| Nitrate | Below 20 ppm | More tolerant than tangs but cleaner is better |
Weekly 15% water changes maintain parameters in a 70-gallon without a sump. A sump with a refugium provides additional stability and biological filtration capacity that benefits the entire system including the angelfish.
A correctly sized skimmer handles the dissolved organics a coral beauty produces. Our protein skimmer guide covers in-sump models sized for 70 to 100-gallon reef systems.
Coral beauty diet: omnivore feeding with algae emphasis
Coral beauties are omnivores with a strong preference for algae. In the wild, they spend the majority of feeding time grazing film algae, turf algae, and detritus from coral and rock surfaces.
They supplement this with small invertebrates, worms, and organic material.
- Nori (dried seaweed): Clip to the glass 3–4 times weekly as the algae component
- High-quality marine pellets: Ocean Nutrition Formula Two or New Life Spectrum as the daily staple
- Frozen mysis shrimp: 3 times weekly for protein supplementation
- Frozen angelfish-specific foods: Ocean Nutrition Angel Formula contains sponge material that mimics wild diet
- Live rock: Natural grazing on film algae between formal feedings
Coral beauty health and the reef-safe question
Coral beauties are generally described as "reef safe with caution." In practice, this means roughly 70–80% of individuals never touch coral polyps, while 20–30% develop a nipping habit that makes them incompatible with certain coral types.
- Marine ich: Susceptible when stressed or newly introduced. Quarantine and copper treatment in a separate tank.
- Brooklynella: Rapid mucus shedding, primarily in wild-caught fish. Requires formalin treatment.
- Hole-in-the-head disease: Linked to low-nutrition diet and poor water quality. Improve both to reverse early cases.
Coral beauty tank mates: works with most reef fish
Coral beauties are moderately aggressive for a dwarf angel. They hold territory against fish that encroach on their rock-face territory but generally ignore fish that occupy different water columns.
They coexist well with clownfish, tangs, cardinalfish, and most other non-angelfish reef species.
Clownfish are one of the best companions because their surface-zone territory never overlaps with the coral beauty's rock-face foraging. The clownfish care guide covers their 20-gallon minimum and how they behave alongside a mid-size dwarf angel.
Yellow tangs share the same 70-gallon-plus tank requirement and occupy the open-water zone the coral beauty ignores. Our yellow tang care guide explains the tang's algae-grazing role and how it benefits a tank that also houses a coral beauty.
Royal grammas occupy cave territory similar to the coral beauty, so tank size matters in this pairing. The royal gramma guide covers the 75-gallon threshold where two cave-dwellers can coexist without persistent territorial overlap.
Banggai cardinalfish hover mid-tank and have no conflict triggers with the coral beauty's rock-face zone. The Banggai cardinalfish guide covers their low-flow shelter needs, which are easy to meet in a 70-gallon with a sump.
Six-line wrasses compete for the same rock-face foraging zone in smaller tanks. Our six-line wrasse guide explains the introduction order rules that reduce conflict between these two rock-face species.
If you are building a reef around the coral beauty, our reef tank setup guide covers the coral introduction sequence to use — start with soft corals to test the angel's nipping behavior before investing in high-value LPS.
Damselfish compatibility depends on species. Our article on clownfish and damselfish compatibility covers which chromis species are safe with a coral beauty and which aggressive damsels will create persistent territorial problems in a shared 70-gallon.