Yes, they won't bother them.the Carp and Koi are among the same family and are scrap eaters. they dont eat other fish, they eat the scraps they find to be tasty in the bottom of the lake or pond. this is why most people dont recommend eating them
a carp! go to www wikipedia.com and look up koi and koi is Japanese for carp! i got one! and they are cool! same as a plectomus! another name for a type of catfish! but tropical! a catfish is cold water (i think)!
larger
The tunica media of arteries is larger than that of veins of same size.The tunica adventitia is larger in veins than arteries of same size.
Move up and down but stay in the same position
This is known as an aftershock.
No, there is a difference. A pond is "a small body of water" A river is "a large natural stream of fresh water that flows inot the ocean" The difference: A river is a large body of water-a pond is a small body of water A river is a moving body of water-a pond is still and calm A river flows into a larger body of water-a pond stays in the same place and doesn't travel :) !!! jd218
No.
A buffalo carp is not really a carp. It is a fish in the sucker family called a Small Mouth Buffalo. This fish is commonly confused with the common carp and thus its colloquial name has evolved to be "Buffalo Carp." The fish is commonly found in the southern USA. Multiple Small Mouth Buffalo of over 70 lbs have been caught wiht rod and reel in the USA. A buffalo carp is not really a carp. It is a fish in the sucker family called a Small Mouth Buffalo. This fish is commonly confused with the common carp and thus its colloquial name has evolved to be "Buffalo Carp." The fish is commonly found in the southern USA. Multiple Small Mouth Buffalo of over 70 lbs have been caught wiht rod and reel in the USA.
No. Buffalo fish is native of North America and carp is native of Asia. Although they are commonly confused for the other, buffalo and carp, are not related of species. German Carp are yellow to green in color with small whiskers at the corner of their mouths. Asian Carp are silver with scales like shad. Grass Carp which are a type of Asian carp are more greenish yellow with large scales like the buffalo. Buffalo are light brown to black depending on the color water with large scales there are three types of buffalo. Same colors just different body shape.
I saw a "koi" japanese carp in a small pond, inside a buddhist temple in Tokyo, with its body completely transparent. You can see the squeleton of the fish, swimming along other normal fish; also, I saw in the same place another fish with the head transparent, and the rest of the body more or less normal. I have the pictures. Maybe nobody nows about it.
Imagine this... Take a smooth pond of water. Take a small pebble and toss it into the pond. Take notice of the ripples created, both the frequency and amplitude. Now take a larger rock and toss it into the smooth pond. Take notice of the ripples it creates. The same frequency with a larger amplitude. The stronger source created larger amplitude waves. This is how two waves can have the same frequency but different amplitudes - a stronger source power.
no
No they won't most of them will eat each other if they have no food or if the larger tadpoles a hungry they will eat the smaller and weaker tadpoles. And some will die from mosquito larvae and adult mosquitoes and will be eaten by larger fish if they are in the wild.
The words 'heart' and 'carp' aren't confused in Japanese. 'Love' and 'carp' may often be confused, however. Both these words are pronounced the same and, as far as I know, have identical pitch.Love - 恋 (koi)Carp - 鯉 (koi)
Much the same things as larger dogs i would imagine.
No, a Koi is a carp. It comes from the Japanese word Nishikigoi which literally means 'coloured carp'.
No they a of the carp family