The best way to know is to use a hydrometer to measure the salt level, you want around 1.025 or 35 ppt salt.
it depends what fish you are keeping
Brine shrimp do not need acidity, it will die in acidic water. It needs alkaline water though (PH around 8).
Only if you choose to put so much salt in it
i dont know i am trying to find out also
No. Too much salt. There are brine shrimp, but no fish.
They are an excellent food for small fish of all types. There are freshwater shrimp (for of course, freshwater fish) and brine shrimp that grow in saline waters, hypersaline tidal bays, Great Salt Lake as examples. I have hatched out brine shrimp for small growing angelfish (easy) and it is an excellent food. I have also grow them to adult size for adult fish (much harder). If you would like to try this, there is a lot of information on the web. Don't be discouraged if you don't succeed the first time. There's a trick to it.
Seahorses are not recommended as pets for anyone who is not an expert. The reason for this is that they can be difficult to keep alive. In the wild, seahorses suck plankton and small crustaceans (like brine shrimp) in through their snout all day long. In an aquarium, they could not survive on just brine shrimp food, instead, they need a living diet, i.e. a diet of living organisms. It is very expensive to keep them. Additionally, many countries regulate seahorses, so it is not only expensive to purchase them, many times it is not possible.
Yes, but feed with caution - they may become reluctant to eat anything else, and brine shrimp as a staple will provide too much protein, leading to shell deformity. Try a small amount about weekly. If everything goes fine, continue. If they won't eat anything else anymore, starve them until they do, but for no longer than a week, and then avoid feeding again.
No, the Great Salt Lake does not have dolphins in it. The water is far too salty for much life to survive. Brine shrimp flourish, but no fish or other larger marine creatures can live there.
As much as a pistol and a shrimp on a boat.
If they are adults, its is quite easy. First, prepare the larger tank to house the sea monkeys. This will include dechlornating the water, adding the proper amount of salt, and bringing the larger tank up to the same temperature as the original. Then it is simply a matter of straining the sea monkeys out of the smaller enclosure using a brine shrimp net (available online at www.bigalsonline.com OR at most pet stores). Then simply place the brine shrimp into a larger container. For newly hatched brine the process is similar, except that you will need a MUCH finer net such as a rotifer seive.
seahorses mostly feed on brine shrimp,tiny fish,plankton and that's pretty much it seahorses also suck their food thorugh their snout they don't have teeth so they will swallow live food in whole!
shrimp cholesterol concentration is