They are all common freshwater species.
Yes. But large catfish eat small bluegill.
Literally, everything. Large and smallmouth bass (tricky to catch), walleye, carp, bluegill, I've heard reports of gar, catfish, crappie.
You can find bluegill in fresh water. Prolly in a lake or large pond. I fish next to bridge pillars if I go for bluegill. They love wax worms..
Yes, largemouth are raised in farms for stocking purposes only, not as a food fish, like channel catfish and tilapia are.
Bluegill usually swim in schools containing large numbers of fish for protection. Also, they are swift, agile swimmers.
There are two kinds of 'albino' catfish commonly seen in aquariums. One is the albino channel catfish....which will grow to be VERY LARGE and will eat anything it can put in its gaping mouth...the other kind is the albino corydoras catfish. The corydoras will get along PERFECTLY with guppies and just about any aquarium fish...'library' or not.
For catfish some bodies of water are much more prone to have trophy fish than others. Small ponds for instance may have large amounts of Catfish but will rarely have any true trophies. Bodies of water that hold Flathead Catfish and Blue Catfish are much better places to fish for a true trophy than a lake that only has Channel Catfish for instance
Yes, if the tank is large enough, they can do well in captivity.
Lake of the Ozarks for sure. You can catch Pike, Large mouth Bass, spotted bass, striped bass, Walleye and channel catfish.
Flathead catfish commonly know as "yellow cat" or "mud cat" are predatory fish and will consume bass, bream, shad, crayfish and will often feed on it's own kind. The young rely more extensively on aquatic insects and crayfish than do the adults. Large flatheads sometimes congregate where food is plentiful such as near tail races of dams. They often feed at the surface or in shallow water at night, returning to their residence in a hole or brush pile to rest during the day. They rarely eat dead or decaying matter. That's all I know. Hope I helped:)
Bluegill should be kept in a large pond they are a sport fish rather than an aquarium fish and they're regarded as good eating too.
1 pound