The white film you are seeing is an overproduction of the fish's slime coat due to a crash in pH or infestation of parasites. The bottom sitting is usually consistent with parasites or bacterial infections, but being the skin is milky parasites are definitely suspect. To treat, raise the tank's salt concentration to 0.3% and add an antiparasitic medication to the water.
No, you are thinking of Jaws 3, in which a great white shark manages to sneak into an aquarium park called SeaWorld through an underwater gate to the open ocean.
Its the rock, sand, gravel, whatever on the bottom of an aquarium.
the white bugs in the aquarium are grub worms
plecostamus
You can purchase white aquarium rocks for your fish tank at pet stores, aquarium supply stores, or online retailers that specialize in aquarium supplies.
Facts about the actors and film appearing in large white lettering along the bottom of the screen.
Free Willy
Moldy cheese or an eyeball
Anything labeled safe for aquarium use. Beyond that, it depends on what type of fish you are keeping, and whether or not you have plants, for which type of aquarium substrate (gravel or other lining for the bottom) should be used.
yes you can
They do not get white! So do not worry! If they do, go to the v.e.t!