Most cases, NO. Your lobster can try to eat any fish comparible in size and also, when the lobster sheds it's shell it is like jelly so another fish could eat him/her like a blob of J-E-L-L-O. Scott
No. Not in the traditional definition of the tropical tank. A tropical tank is a freshwater aquarium. Regal Tangs are saltwater fish and go in a saltwater tank (marine aquarium).
No! marine fish are salt water fish and tropicals are fresh water fish, this cannot be changed.
GUESS WHICH IS REAL AND U WIN $5,000,000,000,000,000,000,000!!!!!!!! A- i would go there marine fish are SOFT!!! you wont need to change the water and everything. you cant get a fish called 'clown loaches' which arent tropical and they don't eat snails too!! B- i wouldn't go there marine fish are HARD !! you will need to change the water and everything. you can get a fish called 'clown loaches' which are tropical and the eat snails too !!
If you are going from the pet-store's tank to yours you should place the whole bag into your tank for at least 30 minutes then release the fish. If you are going from your tank to another tank you should wait until the tanks are the same temperature then go from one tank to another.
Yes he is. Tropical fish include fish found in tropical environments (found close to the equator) around the world. The Guppy originates from South and Central America so he is a truly tropical fish.most of the guppies are found in st.lucia
they just settle at the bottom of fish tank
Coldwater fish go with Goldfish (temperature under 70F). Tropical fish go with Bettas (temperature over 70F). Just make sure that you don't put any more than one Betta in a tank. So Bettas and tropicals don't go with Goldfish and vice versa.
well depends on the size of the tank and how many fish if you where me i would fill the whole tank up whith hot and cold water to settle the fish/s..............................................:) hoped this helped watch me on youtube/mr fish or go on www.fish care.com/bye ;)...ps coment rate and subscribe god bless you bye
That all depends on how warm the area is where you wish to keep the tank. If the tank will need a heater/thermostat unit then that would be the main physical limiting factor. The unit must go completely under water. I would remind you however that the smaller the tank the harder it is to keep fish in it successfully. The basic rule for keeping fish is 1 gal (4.25ltrs) of water is needed for 1" (2.5cm) of fish.
When u tap into the fish tank, you cause tiny waves to form that scare the fish.
Water, for starters.
You should have a thermostatically controlled aquarium heater, and a good thermometer to monitor the temperature. Although they are sold, don't use the type of thermometer that you stick to the glass; that doesn't give you an accurate temperature. Use one that goes in the tank itself. For tropical fish, I have had the best success with the temperature about 75-78 degrees F.