yes they can live with other fish because there not prone to dissease
No. Too much salt. There are brine shrimp, but no fish.
Brine shrimp thrive in shallow, brackish water.
Flamingos eat brine flies, shrimp, and mollusks, and other small creatures that live in shallow water.
you can find brine shrimp in the water
newts can live with brine shrimp , most likely frogs and of corse other newts
Larger fish are often fed live foods such as brine shrimp, or frozen foods such as bloodworms.
Predators of any type are animals that kill other animals. In this particular case brine shrimp are those little tiny things that live in the sea,they used to sell on the back pages of comic books in the 1960's and 70's , known as sea monkey's. They are also found in Goldfish food(my fish eat them) so I am presuming that many fish eat brine shrimp in the ocean.So my asnwer to your question is Fish.
brine shrimp can develop in to adulthood in as little as eight days fruit flies only live for 10 days, that's the shortest in the world fruit flies live off of fresh food female brine shrimp have brood sacs, male brine shrimp have claspers brine shrimp have gills, fruit flies don't
Baby bettas should be fed live or frozen brine shrimp and daphnia. Older bettas will eat bloodworms,daphnia,brine shrimp,betta pellets, and blackworms.
Fish in the Smamp eat algae or water lilly. Any plant on water!
In the wild they eat small insects and mosquito larvae. So other foods bettas enjoy are bloodworms (live, frozen, or dried) and small brine shrimp.
no!, as their name suggests they live in salt water.