from my experience, bettas can live with other fishes provided that you have a bigger space or tank. then i guess it wont fight for its territory. i have a tank full of bettas and other fish species, including black neon tetras. but so far, no fights have occured.
There are some kinds of frogs that can live in aquariums: African Frog http://www.elmersaquarium.com/48africanfrog.htm
Technically, yes they can but there is a high chance your cichlids will lose their eyes.
yes
Yes
in Africa in small fresh water lakes full of micro shrimp and plankton Africa.
Frogs can not live in salt water. The salt will kill them. don't ask me why.
Frogs cannot tolerate salt and they all need to live near water. Technically, every frog in the world is a freshwater frog, because if it is too far away from fresh water it will die. Some frogs are exclusively aquatic and never leave the water for anything. The African Dwarf Frog and African Clawed Frog are the best known of these because they are popular additions to aquariums. Its also a type of poisonous lizard
No most frogs live in moderate watertemperatures like 10 - 20 degrees C. Most frogs will leave the water if too hot.
They could but don't. Sharks live in salt water and frogs don't. Frogs live in jungles and marches, not exactly shark territory.
Fresh water.
freshwater
Frogs do not live in the sea, they require fresh water, such as ponds or swamps. They are amphibians, so that they live both on land and in the water.
Frogs do not live in beaches. They need fresh water. The ocean contains salt water, which would be harmful to frogs.
no there are no tadpoles in the coral reef they can not live in salt water
Lobsters live in salt water and frogs live in or near to fresh water, so in nature the two animals would never come into contact.
Frogs are primarily freshwater creatures. While some frog species can tolerate brackish water (a mix of freshwater and saltwater), most frogs live and breed in freshwater habitats such as ponds, lakes, streams, and marshes. They typically do not thrive in saltwater environments.
Most frogs cannot live in salt water, because it will dehydrate and kill them, but there are a very few frogs that have adaptations that allow them to be exceptions:Crab-eating frogsAfrican clawed frogsSouthern leopard frogs
its turtles, frogs, carp, clams, catfish.
Guppies, Platties, Swordtails and Mollies. there are a few others, but you likely won't see them in the aquarium trade.
Yes but use the proper dosage of aquarium salt for the size of your tank. You might look into a brackish aquarium guide.
there are two type of sharks sea or salt water sharks live in the sea wherelse fresh water sharks are available in aquarium shops , fresh water sharks are smaller in size about 12 cm in length