yes
you can look after them by making shore they dont over populate the tank by not feed them loads.
Yes, it is perfectly fine for a baby to look at themselves in a mirror. The baby will think that they are just looking at another baby.
Baby Pomacea canaliculata snails, 1 hour after leaving the eggs. Note the red intestines of these young snails. This is caused by the reddish, carotene-rich yolk they have lived on when they were growing inside the eggs.Pomacea bridgesii snails don't have such a red body when they are born (also see the picture above of hatching Pomacea bridgesii
blue snails look like snails but the slimy bit of the snail is blue
No, it is impossible to change a baby's race. Race is genetic. Even if you got surgery to make you look Chinese when you are really African you would still be African. You'd just look Chinese.
Freshwater baby snails look like tiny minature versions of the adult. Marine snails (from the ocean) have several stages, but they're called trochophore and veliger larvae. Trochophores are microscopic, and look a bit like a little bee hive with little hairs at the top. Veliger larvae looks like a snail shell with two parachutes on the bottom.
It's different for every animal, but typically, babies do wean themselves. I have animals and though most wean themselves, sometimes you have to separate the baby from the mother for a period of time and then you can put the baby back in. At least it's easy to do that with guinea pigs...
They are snails & look like them.
to be honest i really don't know but they will multiply in quantity in weeks you might find more than 1,000 in your tank a week-month later...
There may be more than 50,000 species of snails in the world, and each of these species are of three basic types, land snails, sea snails, and freshwater snails.Some types of snails include the Roman snail, the garden snail, and the giant African land snail. There are thousands of species of snails.
They don't look after them at all. The young are fully capable of caring for themselves at birth.
Babies don't want to look like anything except themselves. They don't have a sense of what they look like until they get older.