Everything feeds on shrimp which is why they always recommend a shrimp ONLY tank if you are planning to breed them or have very expensive shrimp!! Even some people will recommend certain fish but if they are nippy then no go unless you have a lot of hiding places because even a hungry non aggressive fish will tank a go at a freshly molted shrimp! Also The one and only fish that is 100% safe for shrimp especially crystal reds because they both prefer a softer water is the otto algae eater so it will clean tank walls and plants without putting your shrimp in danger!!!
Shrimp are a heterotroph because heterotroph feeds on other autotrophs and heterotrophs and shrimp will eat algae which is an autotroph.
No. A parasite feeds on its hos while keeping it alive, which is not the case with a shrimp eating algae.
You can feed guppies brine shrimp, tropical flake, freeze-dried bloodworms, etc.
A seahorse feeds on plankton, small fish and small crustaceans such as shrimp and copepods.
Phytoplankton is a type of algae and it is eaten by shrimp, otocinclus, snails, zooplankton, and mussels.:)
No, the royal gramma is not an herbivore. It is a carnivorous fish that primarily feeds on small crustaceans and zooplankton in the wild. In captivity, they can be fed a diet of meaty foods such as frozen shrimp, brine shrimp, and small fish.
No, the platypus is a carnivore. It feeds on annelid worms, tiny shrimp and annelid worms that live at the bottom of freshwater creeks and rivers.
Gobed Purwanto has written: 'Evaluation of the nutritive quality of formulated feeds produced from shrimp waste meal materials'
A seahorse is a fish, and feeds on small floating crustaceans, or crustaceans crawling on the bottom.
Kittiwakes are gulls that tend to eat fish, shrimp, and worms.
The narwhal is a carnivore, as it feeds on fish.
Pandalus borealis feed on phytoplankton as well as zooplankton. One of the predators of the pandalus borealis is cod fish. Pandalus borealis are also known as northern shrimp and northern prawn.