Really fat. First the molly silver when she get pregnant she would take 50 day to 70 days to give birth to his baby but take the female a part of the MALES molly Silver the male is going to eat the baby and kill them one by one I telling you because today my female molly silver gave birth today and the male and other kind of molly they would eat the baby take the female apart please do it know before is to late
a fish that is silver
Only live bearing fish get pregnant and Glo fish being a type of danio are egg layers therefore the eggs are fertilized and develop outside the fish's body. So no Glo fish is ever going to get pregnant
Yes, a black Molly is a breed of fish in the breed "Molly". They grow up to about two and three-fourths inches from head to tail. These fish are a community breed so you can mix them with other community fish. They come from Central America.
These fish can be taken care of just like most fish out there. Get a tank with a filter and put them in. Feed the Molly tropical flake food and the 'sucker fish' pleco algae tablets.
Silver fish aren't actual fish. They are greyish-silverish insects that feed on sugar and starches. They're called silver fish because they have fish-like movements.
In dropsy the scales stick out from the body like a wood rasp. If your female molly has been in a tank where there is a male molly present then it is almost certain that she is gravid (pregnant).
usually most mollies have a gravid spot meaning it is a black spt near the anal fin and these are found on colored mollies where on a black molly, you can see it cause the mark is black but if you have an orange molly definetly a gravid spot and when she is ready to birth, she will look like a square where her stomach is. good luck! :)
I am not aware of any "schooling" or "shoaling" fish that is not an egg layer. This would imply that these species of fish do not get pregnant.
Mollys like to be kept at around 70F to 75F
Molly fish newborns, also known as fry, are typically miniature versions of the adult fish. They are very small, often transparent, and may have a slight coloration that resembles the parents. Newborn molly fish are usually able to swim and feed on their own shortly after birth.
Most frogs don't look all that much different. The only visible difference might be a slight fatness around the belly. Frog eggs are not very big and even though there might be thousands of them the female frog is not usually obviously pregnant. You usually have to feel her abdomen, and know what you're looking for, to be able to tell.
Any name you like is a good name ;)