Yes, but it might be better for the fish to have a tank partner by its side. Make sure it is another Fancy Varitey of Goldfish!
No, the goldfish fry are on their own on hatching.
If you mean will a goldfish eat its own fry or eggs then the answer is yes.
Goldfish usually do not eat their own feces; sometimes they confuse it with food, but they will normally spit it right back out. It won't harm them since it's basically the byproduct of the food you feed them, but make sure you are cleaning your tank every week with a water change to remove all the waste.
goldfish. Definatly goldfish. Or betta
No.
The answer is no. People usually think that goldfish get lonely and depressed. This is not true. Goldfish are fine on their own! People usually prefer 2 or more
most people own goldfish.
Their are many varieties of goldfish, however goldfish with fat or potbellied stomachs are classified into the "Egg Bodied" goldfish category. Egg Bodied goldfish are their own distinct group of fancy goldfish which all have an unusually large abdomen. The most popular goldfish in this group are the Orandas, Ranchus, lionheads, and the pearl scale/Hama Nishiki.
Goldfish are not livebearers so they do not become "pregnant" exactly. If you want her to have living young she will have to be around a male goldfish who is showing breeding "tubercules" so he can fertilize the eggs she lays. The eggs will stick to decorations. Goldfish do not care for their young at all- in fact they eat them! So if you want the baby goldfish to survive you will have to move the parents- not the eggs! into a sepperate enclosure. The eggs will soon hatch into fry if in the right water conditions. After the eggs hatch they are now fry. The fry will need to feed on cultered live brine shrimp.
Blub! Blub!
The irony in "What of this goldfish" by Etgar Keret lies in the fact that the protagonist, the goldfish itself, is able to grant wishes to others but cannot fulfill its own desire to return to the sea. Despite its ability to bring happiness to those around it, the goldfish remains trapped and unfulfilled in its own existence.
A goldfish is a heterotrophs. Heterotrophs get food from outside sources. Autotrophs make their own food by photosynthesis or chemosynthesis.