You can put a snail in a small 5 or 10 gallon fish tank with a screen. Or one of those plastic tanks with removable lid. They need to be in a closed container, but with breathing holes. But holes NOT big enough for the snail to get out.
Cipangopaludina chinensis, a cold water snail. Is perfect for cold water tanks. They also reproduce at a slow rate. (one offspring at a time)
No; although clams filtrate water, they are not able to crawl on surfaces eating algae like snails do.
Storage tanks are physical. So are humans. However, I've never heard anyone refer to a human as a storage tank.
The US Lost somewhere between 50-100 M1 Abrams where as the British lost 0 Challenger 1 Tanks.
Yes, vacuum trucks are used to empty septic systems. A company that cleans septic tanks most likely has vacuum trucks.
No they shouldnt. Gold fish are usaly fine with anything in there tanks. Believe it or not but most of the time its recomend to have a snail in your tank to eat the slime
Sadly, he died in a plane crash. But I will forever love his music. No, the question was what "really" happened to John Denver. If his plane crashed and he didn't switch the tanks, why wouldn't John Denver know to switch the tanks" John Denver is known to be very smart. Why couldn't or didn't he switch his tanks, or what is the real story? I heard that the tanks weren't switched.
slimy hard shell live in moist areas can live in water eats the alge on fish tanks as food the snail are jellylike,and slimy, icky and they a ded dead dead DEAD i hate them
well it is vehicular. I have heard the term Mansfield Tanks applied to under-wing usually expendable Drop Tanks, on aircraft. when I was a kid I naively assumed it was the ( German-sounding) name of the designer, like Von Braun. Mansfield Tanks were used on the later versions of the X-l5.
It all depends on what you want. In other words, if they are fish eggs do you want more of the same fish that are in the tank - and the same for snail eggs. The kinds of fish you have will tell you about the eggs and where they are found. Sclares (angel fish) deposit their eggs on the glass or a leaf. Cichlids usually drop their eggs into the sand. Siamese fish blow elaborate "egg nests" made of bubbles. A small gel-like patch on the side of the tank is usually snail eggs - unless you have a large snail such as a Mystery Snail.
This might have been true when fuel tanks were made of metal and for just a small hole at that. This will not work these days as fuel tanks are made of fiberglass and other products.