As long as you keep alot of other fish in there too, so the sharks don't go hungry
An eel, some sharks, and a sting ray. Yes there are some species of these that you can keep in aquariums. They are all saltwater.
All fish, with the right conditions. You do, however, have to be careful about what fish you put together in aquariums.
Yes, sharks are everywhere. Just try to not look tasty, and you will be all right.
Most folks only consider them a true ecosystem if they are self sustaining, which almost all aquariums are not.
all of them but my parents keep telling me
you slowly go towards them and make one of the sharks follow you. then you bring it to the back hole which is a little forward. keep doing it to all the space sharks until they are all gone. be careful not to be sucked in though
A shark will grow in a tank until it fits, meaning it will only be as big as the tank permits while still being able to swim freely. it depends of the size of the tank ,the kind of shark ,how much food and how many sharks
Some people use sharks for flip flops, food, fabric, and to keep them from eating people. All of this is wrong. I highly suggest not doing any of this.
If you have ever seen jaws then sharks have a tendency to ram into the glass. The aquarium glass is not strong enough to hold a shark that size. Plus it could be dangerous 2 the people working there. If anything they are taken into a special facility and worked on' but not an aquarium.
The king of all sharks is the Megalodon.
The space sharks are "swimming" around the Ice Planet (X-73 Y-83) on Astro Knights Island. If you keep going toward the bottom right corner you will see the alert that says "Warning: Space Sharks ahead." To get past these sharks and reach the planet, you need to shoot them (singly or all three at once) until they chase you. You can very slowly lead them up and right to the Black Hole at X-85 Y-47, where you can lure them into the hole, ideally without falling in yourself.
Some people think that sharks never sleep because they need to keep moving in order to breathe. However, some sharks need to keep moving to do this, while others don't. Some sharks have spiracles, a small opening behind their eyes, that force water across the shark's gills so the shark can rest. Other sharks do need to swim constantly to keep water moving over their gills and their bodies, but sharks can swim without using all of their brains. These sharks have active periods, and restful periods, rather than undergoing deep sleep like we do. They seem to be sleep-swimming, with parts of their brain resting.