Because some of the water will slowly evaporate and the tank will dry up if no new water is added.
If snails incresed in number , they will eat up the water plants and so the fishes will also die for food.
the plant will eventually die
water if they are lake snails use lake water, they also need a closed environment and rocks or sand but i would use rocks. They will also need plants and algae or frozen foods for their valanced diet!!!!!!!!!!!GOSH!!!!!!!!
Aphids,snail anmitesnibbled on the plants at my aunt May's garden.
Snails mainly eat lettuce. This is there favourite type of food. I know that snails that live on land love lettuce and different vegetables, but I'm not sure what a water snails would eat.
The population of water snails, tadpoles, and stickleback would become higher because the water beetles would not be eating them. Then the tadpoles, sticklebacks, and water snails would eat all the food that all the other insects in the pond were eating.
Goldfish are omnivors and will eat very young snails that have not yet developed their hard shell. If you have pond snails in your cold water tank, you have a very hard problem to fix. The only reliable way to remove them is to strip the tank down and replace or boil all the rocks, and gravel. Then after a good rinse leave the gravel in the sun for a week or so to completely dry out. All your plants would have to be replaced because snail eggs are almost invisible and you would never be able to find them all. A hint. Never buy or collect plants from anyone if you even suspect there are water snails present.
we would eventually die
Caffeine-free Pepsi would not be the best choice for plants, as it has things in it that may eventually harm them. In the short term, however, it will provide the water that they need to survive.
a consumer. producers are only plants. but if you said a sea snail.... it would be the same
The earth would eventually run out of oxygen. All animals would eventually die.
All other desert life would eventually cease to exist as the plants form the basis of desert food chains and serve as storehouses of water vital to desert life.