Absolutely not.
Parrot fish are tropical fish and aggressive, kois belong in ponds and not tanks because they grow very large, goldfish need 15 gallons each (fancy) or 25 gallons each (single tail), and a 'sucker' is indeterminable as there are numerous types of 'sucker' fish
The Kois Fish Out of Water - 2009 TV is rated/received certificates of: Canada:F
You can find Kois ( their fish) in the forest of the elves when you look in the map you can see a lake and a fish that's where you go.
kois grow big musles by eating vegatables
corn
Koi carp were specifically bred to be kept in ponds.
Mollies, tetras, south African cichlids, African cichlids, wags, gold fish, beta fish, placo's, catfish, guppies, kois, goriamies, theres a lot more but I dont have the time to list them. Go to your local pet store, if they sell aquariums and fish, they should be much more familiar with all the different types than I am.
It depends on the Betta's personality. I WILL live on its own in peace because there solitary animals. But they CAN live with Otto catfish, Cory catfish, African dwarf frogs, Zebra danios, Ghost shrimps, Cherry shrimps and Kulhi loachs. I would recommend no Guppies, Goldfish, other Bettas, Kois, Goramies, Rosy Barbs, Hermit crabs or turtles
The plural of koi, a Japanese karp, is koi.
Very calm and non-territorial fish. I would suggest gold fish called Comets. They are inexpensive since some are used as feeder fish. They come in a variety of colors so some may think that you have more Koi in your pond and since they are gold fish, they can live in cold water and if your pond has enough room, they will survive cold snaps during the winter.
Koi carp are not an 'evolved' species so they do not have 'natural' enemies. Growing to over 2 feet long, it is usually only when small they are preyed upon by larger fish, cats, and fish eating birds like Herrons, Egrettes and Kingfishers.
Well, I'm not sure about two, but one Koi symbolizes "a long and healthy life".
Kois are able to live to be 100-200 years old. The oldest Koi ever recorded was named Hanokot. It lived to be about 226 years old and was kept in a natural pond in someones backyard in Japan. Hanoko was passed on down from generation to generation. Answer The Sturgeon which goes back to prehistoric days. We have them in Canada and they are a protected species. Fishing of Sturgeon is 'catch and release.'