Although there are several species of fish known as "Clown" most are 'salt water fish'. No species of clown fish I know of could live for long in a container holding such a tiny amount of water (3 gallons approx). That size tank is large enough for 3x1" fish or 1 x 3" fish. Put another way 2.5cm of fish needs 4.25ltrs of water. The fresh water Clown Loach (Botia macracantha) needs to be kept in groups of 4 or more and grows to over 30cm. As mentioned earlier, the other fish known as 'Clowns' being salt water fish. It would not be a reasonable proposition to set up a marine aquarium that small.
No, clown fish are marine fish and tetra and guppies are freshwater fish.
Simple You mix some rock salt in tank
yes
i think you would need a medium tank for your fish.
yes, at least with some types of crabs. clowns will do well with hermit crabs, though I'm unsure with other varieties. clown fish naturally live with crabs, but they may need an anemone if it is a particularly aggressive crab.
yes, salt water fish need careful attention to water quality including filtration of some type.
The Clownish is a salt water fish that can be found in the great barrier reef near Australia.
clown fish can last as long as it is healthy enough to live. When sea creatures live in the ocean they tend to be way healthier than if they live in a small environment eg. a tank. Clown fish may live around 3-4 years if they aren't eaten and if they eat and continue to stay healthy.
No, a 24 litre tank is only about 6 gallons which should never house fish. A few ghost shrimp would be ok, or just some live plants, but no fish
Decomposers are microorganisms. They live in plant material in the fish tank,
it depens on the fish... lol
That depends on what you mean to say. For example, if you have one angel fish in the tank you could say "That's the fish's tank" meaning that is the tank for the angel fish. If you also had a couple of clown fish, you could refer to the tank as belonging to all three fish by saying "That's the fishes' tank." Slightly different spelling and punctuation