It is not harmful. But if you want to clean up the algae in the tank you want to get a pleco. They are very peaceful fish and will not harm angelfish. I have a pleco and three angelfish in my 35 gallon tank right now and they get along great!
They are omnivores. I have seen them eat live brine shrimp and herbivore flake food. There are 86 different species of Marine Angelfish and 3 species of Freshwater Angelfish. While most Angelfish species are omnivorous; some Angelfish species are completely herbivorous (algae eaters), and some are completely carnivorous (zooplankton eaters). Most angelfish are omnivores. yes
Angelfish eat algae, some coral, smaller fish, brine shrimp. Angelfish are omnivores.
Angelfish eat algae, some coral, smaller fish, brine shrimp. Angelfish are omnivores.
Angelfish eat algae, some coral, smaller fish, brine shrimp. Angelfish are omnivores.
They are omnivores. I have seen them eat live brine shrimp and herbivore flake food. There are 86 different species of Marine Angelfish and 3 species of Freshwater Angelfish. While most Angelfish species are omnivorous; some Angelfish species are completely herbivorous (algae eaters), and some are completely carnivorous (zooplankton eaters). Most angelfish are omnivores. yes
Freshwater angelfish can't survive in the ocean. Therefore, they don't live there, and they don't eat there!I'm going to assume that you're referring to marine angelfish. Different species of marine angelfish feed on different things. The species of the genus Genicanthus feed chiefly on zooplankton in the wild, while members of the Centropyge feed on filamentous algae. There are some species that feed on fish eggs, sponges, tunicates, bryozoans, hydrioids, and/or various sessile benthic invertebrates.
The most commonly encountered groups of freshwater algae are green algae, diatoms, and blue-green algae
Freshwater algae is a type of algae that only grows in lakes. It is commonly found in states like Minnesota, Michigan, New York, and Colorado.
No, algae are not harmful unless it dies. (Found this answer on Yahoo.com)
Many types of animals eat algae in freshwater. Snails, fish, bivalves and even birds are all common algae eaters.
algae and detritis.:)
freshwater green algae