This is not a good idea. When the angels are fully grown they will consider the guppies nice snacks. If you plan to move the angelfish to a tank with larger fish when they are fully grown, they do make suitable tankmates when small.
Yes, but it won't work out well for the angels.
You'll need at least a 30 gallon tank for angels.
A single male betta would add some flair to the tank and not worry the guppies.
Angelfish will eat all the guppies. If you have guppies, they can live really well with neon tetras and platys.
Angelfish, fighting fish and other bigger fish would. They would do it more often too if the guppy looked weak or less strong than other guppies.
No... the angel fish as babies will be fine with guppies, but as they get older and bigger, the will become more aggressive and will eat anything that it can get to.
NO, my sister has ocean angelfish in her tank and they are friendly around humans but they will eat baby fish like guppies and Minos i have also had a encounter with them in the wild and there more scared of us so they should leave you alone.
8 Zebrafish4 Goldfish11 Guppies
The more "experienced" the fish is, the more fry she will have. I have had younger guppies have only 5 fry in the first batch, as well as older guppies (approx. 10 months to a year old) that have had 100.
There are many different kinds of fish that live around the Bahamas. These fish are considered tropical salt water fish.
Guppies, mollies, swordtail fish, four-eyed fish, and platies or moonfish. There might be more though.
a total of 100 to more than 1,200 eggs are laid, depending on the size and health of the female fish.
Actually many different types of fish eat coral. Butterflies, angelfish, filefish, and parrotfish are some of the more common coral eaters.
There are many saltwater aquarium fish species available. Some of the more popular fish species include: Angelfish, Batfish, Butterflyfish, Clownfish, Dartfish, Frogfish, and Lionfish.
They migrate as they are very delicate and would die if the water were to be too cold.
A beta fish lives happily in a bowl. Never, ever put a goldfish in a goldfish bowl (ironic, I know) because it's too small for them to live in.