There are lots of online instructions that help give you directions to take care of guppies. You can also purchase books specifically on this topic at a book store.
pesonaly i dont belive in guppies NEMO!
$3 and up
Here is one example: 'Caring for her elderly disabled mother took up nearly all Margaret's time.'
Guppies are not extinct, and it is not very likely that they will go extinct, because they breed once a month and have up to 70 babies a month.
by loving and caring for your man. open up let him in by loving and caring for your man. open up let him in by loving and caring for your man. open up let him in
Yes, but you might wake up to a bunch o babies everywhere you have to think tho guppies can have up to 1-100 so i would be careful.
by loving and caring for your man. open up let him in by loving and caring for your man. open up let him in by loving and caring for your man. open up let him in
Male gupies grow up 0.5 to 1.5 inches, and female guppies grow up 1.5 to 2.5 inches.
Yea
Yes, caring is an action so it is a verb. Caring is also a noun and an adjective. Example uses:As a verb: I will be caring for my mom until she gets over the flu.As a noun: A little caring will have her back on her feed in no time.As an adjective: I have to live up to my reputation as the caring child.
It depends on how many guppies, and how well you keep up the tank. In a ten gallon tank, I'd say no more than ten guppies, and do frequent water changes. 10-15% weekly. They need a filter and a heater, as well.
It's perfectly OK to keep guppies together, provided you're careful with the sex ratio. To put it simply, male guppies are horny little mongrels, and if there are more males than females or close to the same number they will harass the females half to death trying to mate. It's best to keep all males, all females, or at least three females for every male. If you have female guppies, they will breed - guppies are one of the most prolific freshwater fish. Even if you don't have males, guppies can store enough sperm to continue becoming pregnant for up to ten months, and they will almost certainly be pregnant when you buy them - so if you can't handle lots and lots of baby guppies, make sure all the guppies you buy are males. Also, it's not a good idea to keep modern guppies in a bowl. The original guppy is small and unbelievably tough, making it a good candidate for a small tank or even a bowl providing that it has strong filtration and is kept very clean. However, the modern guppy has been very inbred in order to produce the different fin shapes and patterns we have today. If you buy guppies at the pet shop and try to keep them in a bowl, you'll probably be disappointed - they have become one of the most delicate fish in the freshwater hobby. Hopefully you'll be lucky enough to track down some proper guppies, as they were before we inbred them - they are delightful.