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Bottom feeders.
yes as long as the surface of the water is large enough to support the number of feeders.
2 male Bettas can not be kept together. Crowntails are the same species (Betta splendens) the only difference is in the tail shape.
believe it or not my bottom feeder is still living we got it in 2005 and it is still living now in 2012
Starfish live in all the oceans, are bottom feeders, and can regenerate lost limbs.
No they live on land
Yes you can put a Betta and bottom feeders together in the same tank. I have two Chinese algae eaters and one male Betta in a 5gl tank and no one bothers each other. The bottom feeders need plants (preferable LIVE) and rocks or something they can hide under and sleep in themselves. I also have a Betta hammock (fake leave with a suction cup to attache to the side of the tank) that you can get at any pet store. My male Betta loves the hammock! One bottom feeder lives in a live plant and the other bottom feeder lives under a rock.
They are bottom feeders. They will eat just about anything ....other small fish live or dead .
well, starfish a bottom feeders/dwellers so they hunt and live on the sea floor.
Betas are brown in the wild because some Betas live in mud, and feed off of flys and small insect's. Betas are livebearers. Betas also somtimes eat other fish.
I wouldn't risk it. betas live alone, and most betas will kill company. buy a separate fish bowl, appropriate for the tadpole when it is older, and larger. :)
Bottom Feeders. The term can be used to describe any organism which primarily dwells and feeds at the bottom on any aquatic habitat. However, it's most often used to describe organisms added to their tanks by aquarium enthusiasts in order to keep their tanks clean. In this case, bottom feeders will either consume the food left uneaten by the tank's main residents or the algae which grows within the tank itself. Examples of bottom feeders available commerically for home fish tanks are Caridina Multidentata, a type of algae eating shrimp, and Ampullariidae or Apple Snails, which consume excess food, rotting vegtation, etc.