No. Tadpoles are newly-hatched frogs and come from their eggs.
Periods are horizontal.Groups are vertical.Just think group = up and downperiod= right and left
groups run top to bottom periods run left to right
They run from left to right
Generally it is a good idea to leave some algae. However, if you want to clean the tank very thoroughly and you are worried about the amount of algae left for your bottom-feeders, the best option is to buy algae discs. They are fairly inexpensive and you can find them almost anywhere that sells fish. They're located next to the fish food and usually a few discs will keep your bottom-feeders from going hungry until algae naturally grows back.
nothing its boiled water that has nothing left over. It will most likely evaportate faster than regular water
Water snakes, fish such as bass and carp, baby alligators and crocodiles, young turtles, predatory insects such as dragonflies, predatory birds such as blue herons, frogs and other tadpoles
Tadpoles need to be left where they are because the frog lays the eggs where they are likely to have enough food and water to survive. You are unlikely to be able to reproduce that environment, so leave them where you found them.
The water snails feed on the nuisance algae and things left on the tank.
Biotic: The algae they eat. Abiotic: The water they depend on.
Yes it can if left in water for long periods of time.
yes it can if the distilled water is left un covered and not kept sterle as it is made to not have any minerals in it and is not growth proof
Only if the beans were left in a body of water for a long time. However mold does grow on beans.
The common frog doesn't protect its young. Once mating and spawning has finished, the spawn is left to develop. The hatching tadpoles live initially on algae until able to feed on microscopic aquatic creatures - and then develop into a frog that is able to leave the water.There are certain frogs of tropical rainforests that lay a single egg in the water found in certain plants. The frog will return and lay an unfertilised egg that the tadpole can eat.
Some of the ova may have been left unfertilised.
If you're having trouble getting algae in a tank with algae eaters there a couple of explanations to consider. 1. They are eating all the algae. Fish can see algae before we can in many cases. 2. The conditions for algae are not correct. My advice is to buy sinking algae wafers for you algae eaters. Drop them in a couple hours before you turn the lights off. They contain extra vitamins etc. that fish won't get from just eating algae. Don't leave the algae disks in for more than and hour and remove what's left over, otherwise you'll begin polluting your tank water.
Its a good idea to do so because algae can build up within the gravel...if you have a snail this may not be needed because their "job" is to eat the left-over fish food that turns into algae.
Black algae shows itself as small black spots on the pools floor walls and fittings untreated they grow. Green Algae often starts as a greenish tinge on the walls or other surfaces of the pool and spreads into the water making it turn green if left untreated.