If your fish is bleeding, it may be due to an injury or a disease. To help your fish, you should first try to identify the cause of the bleeding. If it is an injury, you can try to clean the wound with aquarium salt and treat it with an antibacterial medication. If the bleeding is due to a disease, you may need to consult a veterinarian or a fish expert for proper diagnosis and treatment. It is important to maintain good water quality and provide a stress-free environment for your fish to help with its recovery.
If your fish is bleeding from its gills, it may be due to an injury or infection. To help your fish, you should immediately isolate it in a separate tank with clean water and consult a veterinarian who specializes in fish care for proper diagnosis and treatment.
No, bleeding fish is not necessary for proper handling and preparation. It can help improve the quality of the fish by removing blood and improving taste, but it is not a required step.
Consult a worker in the fish department at your local pet shop. (PetCo, Pet Smart, etc.) If he/she doesn't know, then see if your fish gets better. If not and it dies, then flush it. :'(
the scientific name for the bleeding heart tetra fish is Hyphessobrycon erythrostigma
No, bleeding a fish after it's dead does not improve its taste or quality. Bleeding a fish is typically done while it is still alive to remove blood from the flesh and improve the flavor. Once a fish is dead, bleeding it will not have the same effect.
Blood comes out of your fish, that's how you can tell if something is bleeding.
a bleeding fish
platelets is what forms to help you stop bleeding
There are no bugs that help to stop bleeding. There are parasites, that are bugs, that feed off of blood although there is no benefit to humans. Leeches have been used since the 1800s to help stop bleeding. The leeches are used to drink excess blood until a vein is able to repair itself to stop bleeding.
what is the cure for bleeding eyes i really want to help some people out please i need answer now please help me
Amazon River Basin, South America
they help save them by inserting fish sperm into female fish