Corydoras are omnivorous and will usually find heaps of left over bits and pieces to eat in a well set up tank. Ordinary tropical flakes are OK (I fed mine Tetramin) and as a special treat, a bit of live food like white worms or tubifex goes down very well, particularly if you wish to bring them into breeding condition.
Only if they are Corydoras catfish, or Cory cats. Those are the best kind of catfish.
A extra large Green Cory Catfish can be as big as 1 to 1.5 inches from tip of mouth to tip of the tail fin. They are non-egressive and their mouths are small so unless you are keeping them in a tank you are raising fry, then all should be ok.
I would say like any albino, it is a mutatation of it's species. So if the alibino was bred back to it's parent species which is the bronze cory, you would most likely get mostly natural colored fry.
It depends on what type of cory you go for something like a peppered cory would usually grow no bigger than 8cm
neon tetras barbs cory catfish
Corydoras barbatus is the largest know corydoras species.Also know as - Giant Cory, Filigree Cory, Bearded/Banded/Barbatus CatfishThey grow to about 13cm or 5"However, they are a part of the catfish family, and the largest catfish is the Mekong Giant Catfish - they grow up to 3m or 10 feet.
Guppies, Neon tetras, lemon tetras, cory catfish (bronze), oto sucking catfish, platys etc.
As long as the tank water is clean, and the fish are being fed properly, the catfish may just be entertaining itself by swimming that way.
A catfish can live up to 11-12. vist my website travhal.piczo.com
Yes, you may feed your catfish brine shrimp,aswell as premium high quality flake food. Consult the Net. for complete care infirmation.
Cardinal tetra, catfish, cherry barb, cichlid, clown barb, convict cichlid, and cory are a few.
5+ years is the average for just about all types of Corys. Also keep in mind that they are happiest when in groups of at least 3.