Yes, glow light tetras, like many other fish species, have the ability to regrow their fins if they are damaged or injured. This regenerative ability depends on the extent of the injury, the overall health of the fish, and the conditions of their environment. Providing a clean habitat, proper diet, and minimizing stress can enhance their healing process. However, regrowth may take time, and the new fins may not always perfectly match the original ones in appearance.
Glow tetras would do well on tropical flake food.
Yes they do. They come in different colours aswell. Mainly Red Green and Yellow.
they absorb light from before and then when it is dark they glow the absorbed light
No, glow in the dark requires the absorption of light to emit a glow in darkness. Black lights emit ultraviolet (UV) light, which typically does not charge glow in the dark items like visible light does.
it will not glow
No, a tomato cannot glow when connected to a light bulb. Tomatoes do not have the ability to produce light on their own, so they cannot glow like a light bulb.
Some minerals that glow under ultraviolet light are scheelite, amber, halite.
No, vinegar does not glow under a black light. The glow observed under a black light is typically due to fluorescent substances that react to the ultraviolet light emitted by the black light, which vinegar does not contain.
If you are referring to the "nemo" clown fish . The answer is no. Those clown fish are marine and Glofish are fresh water zebra tetras.
Glo fish are Zebra Danios that have been injected with a jellyfish gene to make them glow. They can mix with most Tetras OK.
You hols it up to the light for a minute
there is no kind of urine that will glow under a black light. Urine will glow green under a neon light, yet it is mainly unseeable with the naked eye without a neon light.