Scoop about 100ml of the water where you found it into a large plastic container and gently place it inside.
After doing so, poke holes on the lid of the container with something that has a sharp point and close the lid, leaving it by itself in a dark corner.
Meanwhile, fill a giant container/bucket with tap water and leave for one day for the chloride to evaporate.
If you bear for any fish to possibly die, place small fishes like guppies with the crayfish as food. You can also feed your crayfish elodea, a water plant, bloodworm, small snails or perhaps tiny insects such as beetles. Crayfish also eat dead water plants. Remember to feed it as much calcium as possible!
If possible, buy a tank with ample space for the crayfish to swim around. Include some gravel on the base of the tank or maybe some water plants or rocks.
NO! If you so much as touch a wild baby bird the mother won't take care of it and the baby will die unless you choose to care for it.
If you do it's Mama won't take care of it anymore.
Do not take care of wild animals.
Take it to a veterinarian or animal shelter, and they'll take care of it.
because baby deers do actually belong in the wild and if you take on out of its habitat it will not be used to your habitat and you are not allowed taking care of any deer, even a fully grown one. Some wild animals are used to surviving and depending on themselves for food and survival.
A hamsters cycle is The baby is born You take it home (or it lives in the wild) you keep it in a cage and take care of it it MAY have babys (if mated) It dies
Certainly. Quokkas are wild animals, and all wild animals take care of themselves.
No!
Crayfish of what I have seen in the wild and done myself caterpillars will fall in the water and be eaten and in my tank I feed my crayfish meal worms
all animals can take care of them selfs. (I mean wild animals)
People who take care of the wild.
U Cant