When ghost shrimp lay eggs, the female carries the green or yellow eggs on her swimming legs under her tail. If you see eggs that are just lying around, they are either unfertilized or from something other than the ghost shrimp.
well, ghost shrimps clean the fish.
My Angelfish love to eat ghost shrimp.
leaf fish eat ghost shrimp
No, they will not. The dragon-fish can eat the ghost shrimp and the snail, and the crab will try to eat anything he can catch.
Ghost Shrimp are a species of Shrimp. They have gills, so they absorb oxygen directly from the water. Just like fish, they do not breath air.
mostly smaller fish like mollies guppies snails and otocinclus
Like all fish, the black ghost knife fish gets it nutrients from its food. They are micro-carnivores, and eat small worms, shrimp, and other small, meaty foods. In the aquarium, they will thrive on brine shrimp, mysis shrimp, blood worms, and other meaty aquarium foods.
Feeder Fish. Most common types of these massed produced fish are Comets, Ghost Shrimp, Guppies, and Rosey Reds.
No ghost shrimp are fine with African dwarf frogs
No not all fish eat shrimp. Shrimp is not available for consumption for all fish. Now a slightly different question would be, "Will all fish eat shrimp?" If it is cut up into small enough pieces there would be no reason why a fish would not eat shrimp.
They are an excellent food for small fish of all types. There are freshwater shrimp (for of course, freshwater fish) and brine shrimp that grow in saline waters, hypersaline tidal bays, Great Salt Lake as examples. I have hatched out brine shrimp for small growing angelfish (easy) and it is an excellent food. I have also grow them to adult size for adult fish (much harder). If you would like to try this, there is a lot of information on the web. Don't be discouraged if you don't succeed the first time. There's a trick to it.
No, shrimp are not considered a type of fish. Shrimp belong to a different group of animals called crustaceans, while fish belong to the group of animals known as vertebrates.