If you have both a male and female in the tank and you see eggs, then it did lay them.
get the eggs out and put them in a separate tank because the fish will eat the eggs.
they just settle at the bottom of fish tank
It all depends on what you want. In other words, if they are fish eggs do you want more of the same fish that are in the tank - and the same for snail eggs. The kinds of fish you have will tell you about the eggs and where they are found. Sclares (angel fish) deposit their eggs on the glass or a leaf. Cichlids usually drop their eggs into the sand. Siamese fish blow elaborate "egg nests" made of bubbles. A small gel-like patch on the side of the tank is usually snail eggs - unless you have a large snail such as a Mystery Snail.
Fish eggs, fish sperm, mold.
If there is only one fish in the tank and it has spawned by itself, the eggs (ova) will not be fertile so they can be removed. It would make things much easier if you said what species of fish you have.
Put the eggs or female fish in a different tank it will be better for the both of them.
take the eggs out and put them in another tank with water!!!!
there is no definite way to tell goldish appart. But when the water temperatures are warmer, if there is a male and a female fish in the tank, the male fish will chase the female fish around the tank, nudging at her belly, to try and make her release eggs. So if you ever see a fish chasing another fish, the fish doing the chasing is a boy and the fish swimming away is the girl. there is no definite way to tell goldish appart. But when the water temperatures are warmer, if there is a male and a female fish in the tank, the male fish will chase the female fish around the tank, nudging at her belly, to try and make her release eggs. So if you ever see a fish chasing another fish, the fish doing the chasing is a boy and the fish swimming away is the girl. there is no definite way to tell goldish appart. But when the water temperatures are warmer, if there is a male and a female fish in the tank, the male fish will chase the female fish around the tank, nudging at her belly, to try and make her release eggs. So if you ever see a fish chasing another fish, the fish doing the chasing is a boy and the fish swimming away is the girl. there is no definite way to tell goldish appart. But when the water temperatures are warmer, if there is a male and a female fish in the tank, the male fish will chase the female fish around the tank, nudging at her belly, to try and make her release eggs. So if you ever see a fish chasing another fish, the fish doing the chasing is a boy and the fish swimming away is the girl. there is no definite way to tell goldish appart. But when the water temperatures are warmer, if there is a male and a female fish in the tank, the male fish will chase the female fish around the tank, nudging at her belly, to try and make her release eggs. So if you ever see a fish chasing another fish, the fish doing the chasing is a boy and the fish swimming away is the girl.
fish don't have babies - they lay eggs!!
You can not tell the exact answer
Barry White...