Only if you choose to put so much salt in it
No. Too much salt. There are brine shrimp, but no fish.
No, the Great Salt Lake does not have dolphins in it. The water is far too salty for much life to survive. Brine shrimp flourish, but no fish or other larger marine creatures can live there.
Baby brine are really too small for a mandarin, you will need to raise the brine shrimp up to a larger size.
They are an excellent food for small fish of all types. There are freshwater shrimp (for of course, freshwater fish) and brine shrimp that grow in saline waters, hypersaline tidal bays, Great Salt Lake as examples. I have hatched out brine shrimp for small growing angelfish (easy) and it is an excellent food. I have also grow them to adult size for adult fish (much harder). If you would like to try this, there is a lot of information on the web. Don't be discouraged if you don't succeed the first time. There's a trick to it.
There is too much salt, no salt at all or some eggs died. But if there is too much or too little salt it doesn't mean the eggs aren't viable.
The purpose is to keep the water moving inside the hatchery without damaging the brine shrimp. Brine shrimp need to be suspended in the water to hatch, and do not hatch well on the bottom. Make sure you have a valve, because almost any airpump will be too powerful for a brine shrimp hatchery without one. All you want to do is keep the brine shrimp from collecting on the bottom.
Yes, but feed with caution - they may become reluctant to eat anything else, and brine shrimp as a staple will provide too much protein, leading to shell deformity. Try a small amount about weekly. If everything goes fine, continue. If they won't eat anything else anymore, starve them until they do, but for no longer than a week, and then avoid feeding again.
What do you think will happen to it? It will die of chemical burns if the pH is too low or too high.
There is no easy answer too this question, but usually at 'Slinkys Grill' we tap about 1.7kg of sugar to neutralize the salt. But its really up too your taste buds to decide your choice.
Since all trilobites are extinct it is not possible to answer this question. However it is believed that most fed on dead or dying material as well as some species of ancient wormlike creatures. most trilobites would have been too large to live on brine shrimp, they were 10 to 25 inches long.
the pipe fish has no teeth so it has to eat its food whole. its mouth is too small to eat anything but brine shrimp or krill. :)
Not likely. Rotifers are too small. You could try live brine shrimp OR a high quality pellet food like New Life Spectrum Thera A pellets. Brine eggs and the pellets are both available at www.bigalsonline.com