yes if you have a take more than 45liters tank its best to have 5 algae eaters below 45liters its best to have 1 as in small groups in a small tank they are very teratorial and in small groups in large tank is the same but a large group in a large tank is usally beast
from rhyskimber all this iformation is about chinise and simase algae eaters is there any think else you need
hola
diatoms are single celled algae. Kelps are large and are many celled algae.
The living organisms depend on each other for their food & shelter. EG: Fungi and algae depend on each other .
what do you mean
A giant meteor hit the earth and blocked the sun so the plants died so the plant eaters died and rotted away. so the meat eaters had nothing to eat so the attacked each other and the last two killed each other.
Seaweed is a term mostly applied to some types of algae. It is not a scientific classification, but rather a colloquial term. The organisms may belong to quite different types of algae, and other organisms in the same groups may not be what we think of as seaweed. Thus their scientific names can be quite different from each other. Some examples: Bladderwrack: fucus vesiculosus Carrageen Mastocarpus stellatus
they are different to each other
A meteor crashed into the earth and blocked the sun so the plants died so the plant eaters had nothing to eat so they died and their body`s rotted away. So the meat eaters had nothing to eat so they attacked each other and the last two killed each other.
they are different to each other
NO. Ducks are not meat-eaters. They eat mostly things like grass. But they do fight with each other.
I do not know what you mean by a "cleaner fish" If you mean the 'Cleaner Wrasse' then the answer is no because guppies are fresh water fish and cleaner wrasse are salt water fish. If on the other hand you mean catfish rather than cleaner fish then it is possible but that depends on what species of catfish you mean.
[1] Organisms that are eaten by other organisms for food is what makes up the predator-prey relationships of food chains. [2] The food chain begins with food producers. Then it goes to plant-eaters as primary consumers, to meat-eaters as secondary/tertiary/quarternary consumers, to everything-eaters. [3] Examples of a water food chain are phytoplankton as producers, zooplankton as plant-eaters, fish as meat-eaters of each other, and sharks as everything-eaters. [4] Examples of a land food chain are plants as producers, insects as plant-eaters, mammals and reptiles and birds as meat-eaters, and bears as everything-eaters.