they live in a 30 litre tank and there is 6 of them and they are all males (because i don't want fry's) and they are a platty, paradise fish, and a zebra danio and 2 lepord danios with them and none of them bully them.
the minnows always swim about with there fins right up and very colourful but they just won't school.
i know it nothing to be worried about but i won't them to school as it will look nicer
pleasw help me thanks
Collective nouns for minnows are a shoal of minnows, a steam of minnows, a stream of minnows, and a swarm of minnows
ha ha gold fish dont eat minnows but if you put them in the same tank they wont be happy toegether trust me im afish expert he he just jokeing i saw it on telivision
I won't lie, Minnows don't have a very long life-cycle. Minnows are first eggs laid near water plants and rocks. After just a few weeks, the minnows hatch into teeny-tiny fry. (baby minnows). The baby minnows stick together into a tiny school. Keeping each other save and feeding together. After a few more weeks, the fry turn into Adult minnows and separate. However sadly, once they are adults they are eaten my bigger fish, and mammals.Olivia the animal lover
Yes, the number of minnows would have many variables, such as how large the lake is and how many predators there are. A school smaller than 150 could definitely exist.
frogs can eat minnows
Neither. Minnows are fish.
minnows are small to large Freshwater Fish
Minnows are excellent bait for many fish species.
Minnows are small fish, and they live in ponds. So ponds are the habitats of minnows.
no, sharks do not eat minnows. dolphins do, though.
Only if they are white cloud minnows.
It is generally not necessary to separate minnows from their offspring as minnows are not known to exhibit parental care or aggression towards their own young. However, having appropriate hiding spaces or plants in the tank can offer protection for the baby minnows from potential predators or aggressive tankmates.