In captivity I know for a fact that they can live up to eight years. The key is a
stable enviroment. I wish someone would do research on their time clock of life.
Mid water
I'm getting a new Tetra for my aquarium. I am unfamiliar with the Tetra species. I already have a Cardinal Tetra, plus some Neons. The Flame Tetra is featured on a postage stamp from Cuba.
The freshwater fish "Paracheirodon axelrodi" of the characin family (Characidae).
Cardinal tetra, catfish, cherry barb, cichlid, clown barb, convict cichlid, and cory are a few.
Yes I'm fairly certain. I have 1cardinal and 4 neons and they all swim together...
I've had mine for 7 years and still going strong. Because I'm a beginner, his care has not always been ideal.
The problem will not be the tetras coexisting with the Bettas. It will be the female Betta. She will undoubtedly be killed by the male. He may well spawn her first but afterwards, if she is left in his presence he will kill her. Also if he has ova or fry to look after he will kill the tetras in defence of his young.
The term "tetras" refers to a family of small freshwater fish known as Characidae, which includes various species commonly kept in aquariums. There are over 150 recognized species of tetras, with popular examples including the Neon Tetra, Cardinal Tetra, and Rummy Nose Tetra. Each species varies in size, color, and habitat preferences. The exact number may fluctuate as new species are discovered and classified.
tetra is 11\12
tetra and 1
nobetta will kill tetra
tetra's car is the audi R8.