Brine shrimp live in a very salty area. many thrive in the Great Salt Lake system. They can survive in such a harsh ecosystem because they take in salt water and expel the salt through their gills.
ocean
We have ecosystems to live. Ecosystems give us energy,oxygen and many other things. Earth is the only planet which have ecosystems.
Plants and animals live in ecosystems. habitats
There are millions upon billions of different ecosystems and there are no names to them. I think you mean biomes. The different biomes are Tundra, Dessert, Forrest, Grassland, Marine, and Freshwater.
Archaebacteria
A freshwater ecosystem is where animals for freshwater and animals who swim or live by freshwater live. For example: animals such as crocodiles, freshwater fish, turtles, or frogs, live in a freshwater ecosystems. I just named some from North West Florida's main freshwater ecosystem.
Brine shrimp thrive in shallow, brackish water.
brine shrimp can develop in to adulthood in as little as eight days fruit flies only live for 10 days, that's the shortest in the world fruit flies live off of fresh food female brine shrimp have brood sacs, male brine shrimp have claspers brine shrimp have gills, fruit flies don't
Daphnia, mosquito larvae, and brine shrimp are good choices for bettas.
no!, as their name suggests they live in salt water.
No, brine shimp prefer hot water over cold
yes they can live with other fish because there not prone to dissease
Possible if you keep turning the water.
No. Too much salt. There are brine shrimp, but no fish.
Flamingos help clarify the waters they live in by filter feeding on brine shrimp and blue-green algae
Two adaptations of brine shrimp include their ability to control the amount of salt that enters their body and their ability to withstand high temperatures. Brine shrimp live well in areas with a high salt content.
Baby bettas should be fed live or frozen brine shrimp and daphnia. Older bettas will eat bloodworms,daphnia,brine shrimp,betta pellets, and blackworms.
Yes! You can buy brine shrimp at a local pet store, just ask the owner how to feed them to a beta fish. Usually you freeze them and don't need to clean them. I just got brine shrimp and I'm excited to try them out! Goodluck :]