Sometimes they can but I think people wouldn't put them a tank with fish cause the jelly fish might eat them so put the in a separate tank so the jelly fish doesn't kill the fish
Yes although they are reared by special means
Freshwater jellyfish are clear. Like a plastic bag.
nope
Yes. Although most jellyfish are marine animals, some inhabit freshwater.
They are common in both Brackish and Salt water. I do not know of a freshwater species of jellyfish although it is quite possible there are some from the Amazon Basin. There are freshwater Jelly fish which have evolved in the carribean islands. National Geographic aired a documentary on it recently. Go here for some information on Jellyfish http://www.destination-scuba.com/deadly-jellyfish-sting.html
No, goldfish are freshwater fish.
No, goldfish are freshwater fish.
No, goldfish are freshwater fish.
it would die because they cant survive the freshwater trip
Jellyfish can be found in many parts of the world as the can live in seawater and freshwater. Jellyfish are in the waters of Hawaii, California, France, Africa and Australia.
Water would diffuse into the cells of the jellyfish, causing it to bloat up and possibly burst.
Yes; jellyfishes live in freshwater, like some Limnomedusae.
Anthozoa: corals and sea anemones Scyphozoa: Jellyfish Cubozoa: box jellyfish Hydrozoa: freshwater cnidarians in many forms