Glofish are simply Zebra Danios that have had a 'glo' gene from a jellyfish added in a laboratory. They grow to around 1.5 inches long. You should have sufficient room for the Danio but you are getting close to overstocking. The basic rules for successfull fishkeeping are :- 1 inch of fish needs a minimum of 1 gallon of water. :- Every tank needs a permanantly running cycled filter. :- Every tank needs at least 50% of its water replaced every week. If you keep to the above rules your fish stand a good chance of surviving. If you don't keep to them, I can guarantee that you will have regular and constant health problems with your fish.
Yes! I had two large goldfish and two very small tetras and they all coexisted very peacefully.
Yes, they are community fish!
No. Glo fish are freshwater organisms and lobsters are saltwater organisms. And if they could live in the same water, one eats the other.
Glo fish are Zebra Danios that have been injected with a jellyfish gene to make them glow. They can mix with most Tetras OK.
Glo fish don't have gravid spots. Gravid spots are actually the many eyes of the unborn babies of certain live bearing fish like guppies, mollies, and platies.
A little less longer than regular goldfish.
The answer is YES!
Saltwater I believe. You may want to double check though :)
Glo fish are genetically changed Zebra Danios. They would be eaten by any of the larger cichlids such as Oscars.
Yes.
Yes they are.
freshwater.
ugly
Same food a regular glo-fish eats (the mother or father). I recommend fish flakes because it gives the fish a diet and you don't have to feed them ALL the time, but if they are huge, i recommend blood worms or shrimp.