They are separate species. In their juvenile form they look very similar, but as they age they will look completely different from each other. This is because they are cleaner fish as juveniles and their distinct pattern lets other fish know that they're open for business.
@@watercolorsaquariumgallery thanks for your reply, also one more doubt. My tank is fairly new( 3 months old), so is it a good option to keep a koran Angel now? Other tank mates will be 2 clowns, 1 cleaner shrimp and a dr rass
Tank age is going to matter less than overall stability. The main benefit to an older tank is it may have more algae for them to graze and more developed coral growth. If your tank is large enough for a fish this size, and consistently tests well then 3 months isn't too new.
Hi I have a aquarium with soft coral and zoas and anemones and ermit crabs ... I can put in my tank this koran angelfish? Please help me
It would be risky, but possible. They're more prone to eating stony coral, but I would hesitate to trust any large angel completely.
Noooooo
What is the difference between koran Angel and emperor angel? Aren't they both looking same?
They are separate species. In their juvenile form they look very similar, but as they age they will look completely different from each other. This is because they are cleaner fish as juveniles and their distinct pattern lets other fish know that they're open for business.
@@watercolorsaquariumgallery thanks for your reply, also one more doubt. My tank is fairly new( 3 months old), so is it a good option to keep a koran Angel now? Other tank mates will be 2 clowns, 1 cleaner shrimp and a dr rass
Tank age is going to matter less than overall stability. The main benefit to an older tank is it may have more algae for them to graze and more developed coral growth. If your tank is large enough for a fish this size, and consistently tests well then 3 months isn't too new.