yes.
Not in the wild. But in a tank, they can eat BANANA TREATS™, which the brine shrimp love.
There are many things you can feed goldfish fry. Some of the most popular are brine shrimp and Euphoria. You can buy brine shrimp eggs at most aquatic dealers/fish stores and hatching and raising them is relatively simple. When the brine shrimp are ready just use a small siphon to suck them out and release them in the goldfish fry tank. Now for Euphoria- that is a bit more difficult and not for the inexperienced fish breeder- you'd probably be better off just sticking to brine shrimp.
If they are adults, its is quite easy. First, prepare the larger tank to house the sea monkeys. This will include dechlornating the water, adding the proper amount of salt, and bringing the larger tank up to the same temperature as the original. Then it is simply a matter of straining the sea monkeys out of the smaller enclosure using a brine shrimp net (available online at www.bigalsonline.com OR at most pet stores). Then simply place the brine shrimp into a larger container. For newly hatched brine the process is similar, except that you will need a MUCH finer net such as a rotifer seive.
There are two main causes of water backing up into a water softener brine tank. The injector assembly may be defective and not draw all of the brine out of the tank and then the timed brine refill will put back a predetermined amount of water, causing the level of brine to increase in the tank after each regeneration. The other cause may be a defective brine valve which has a slow leak after it closes and causes the tank to overfill.
No, the sea monkeys are just genetically altered brine shrimp. Brine shrimp are great for fish, even better live. They're super easy to raise, and not too expensive to get everything going. Just make sure you pick out healthy ones, and drop them into your tank. Great for other fish too if you have them.
No, shrimp and goldfish should not be kept together in the same tank as goldfish may eat the shrimp.
That is because there is no such thing as sea monkeys. Oh yes there is i had some this morning and then at night they were gone i mean sea monkeys arent real they're brine shrimp but my tank cleared to but they can bring themselves back to life so dont throw the tank out!
No, cherry shrimp should not be kept with goldfish in the same tank as goldfish are known to eat shrimp.
You would not put tropical fish in a tank of cold water because the live in warm climates and need a temperature of 24 - 26/28 degrees Celsius to survive.
They can live together but you will have to be carefull with the temperature setting of your heater/thermostat and try to keep the tank fairly steady at around 75F to suit both species of fish. Tetra Tropical Flakes are a good all round fish food. Bettas are insectivores and need more protein than guppies so it is a good idea to feed the fish a few Betta pellets and live brine shrimp occasionally.
The recommended number of shrimp that can comfortably live in a 20-gallon tank is around 20 to 30 shrimp.