you can just leave them in cold water but not super cold.
you can keep them alive by putting them on heating pads and rolling the egg 3 times a day.
In their tentacles!
No where readily available unless your Looking to spend a good amount of money on a New Aquarium (which is designed Specifically for them), Specific foods and then the Jelly it's self.What you are looking for is a Craspedacusta sowerbyi which is a freshwater jellyfish in the phylum Cnidaria. Since it is classified as a hydrozoan, it is one of many jellyfish that are also known as hydromedusae ("medusa" is another word for jellyfish).The dedication it takes to Keep a Jelly Alive and in good shape is something I suggest for only Pro's as there is more to keeping it alive then dumbing it in a tank and hoping for the best.But if you do happen to get one I wish you the best. I have always wanted one but I do not have the time to invest but Love reading about anything having to do with Jellies.
They work hard to travel, keep eggs alive, eat, and get food for their babies.
It is not ideal to keep a jellyfish. The mechanical filtration could be any or none. The biological filtration is what does it all.
to use for a home for the eggs and to keep away from predators
Bring home some salt water for him to live in.
We have been watching a jellyfish that has been out of the water for apprx. 6 hours, and it is still breathing/flexing and clearly still alive. The tide is now coming back and we'll see if it can still swim and function normally......
that is not true because if you don't sit on your egg it will get cold and the egg has to be warm to keep the baby alive inside the egg
No, all frogs lay eggs. Some keep their egg in their mouth (mouth breeders and the Surinam Toad is known to deposit their eggs in the skin on the back of the female.
As far as I know, yes. But if the hen who is laying on the eggs happens to pass, then it is best to keep it in warm weather to keep the egg(s) alive. A broody hen will only set when she has collected enough eggs to brood a clutch. For about a week before settling down she will move around like any other hen but return to the clutch often. A hen must remain on the clutch to keep them warm and humid is she is actually incubating the eggs.
They go to the warmer water.