yes sometimes to their own community cause they turn cannibles some times when they get very hungry an eat their own kind
No.
No. Yabbies have an exoskeleton.
To farm yabbies, first, create a suitable environment by establishing a pond or tank with clean, warm water and a substrate for burrowing. Introduce yabbies, ensuring a balanced male-to-female ratio for breeding, and provide appropriate food such as pellets, vegetables, and organic matter. Maintain water quality, monitor temperature, and control predators to ensure healthy growth. Harvest yabbies when they reach market size, typically around 10-12 centimeters.
They can come out on land only when breeding. My two yabbies did
Yabbies, or freshwater crayfish, survive in the wild by adapting to their aquatic environments, primarily in rivers, lakes, and wetlands. They are opportunistic feeders, consuming a variety of organic materials, including plant matter and small invertebrates. Yabbies can burrow into the sediment to escape predators and survive drought conditions by entering a state of dormancy. Their ability to tolerate varying water conditions and their reproductive strategies also contribute to their resilience in the wild.
err not a good idear yabbies will eat a goldfish
Crayfish are known as both crayfish and yabbies in Australia. "Yabbies" are freshwater crayfish, often found in rivers, creeks and dams in rural areas.
yes they are
You can but it's not smart to do so. The Yabbies will rip bits off the fish.
No. Although platypuses are carnivores, they do not eat dogs. They are predators; they eat small water animals such as aquatic insect larvae, fresh water shrimp, annelid worms, yabbies and crayfish.
yes yabbies are meat eaters and if arn't fed well the will attack frogs and tadpoles
yabbies were first found in edenatorejupiter or guytiporfjubintequa (aqua-poo-poo-flute-free-liteny)