no never the neons will eat em never ever or u want ur sea-monkeys to be fish food
It all depends on tank size. If you have a ten gallon tank, smaller species of tetra (cardinal, neon) make good choices and bring lots of color with them. Other good choices are some of the more peaceful barbs (cherry, rosy). Tiger Barbs are known to be more aggressive. Zebra danios, swordtails, platies, guppies, and other live-bearers make good choices as well. The possibilities are endless with a larger tank where fish can estalish their own territories; however with the Glofish's slender body and small size you have to avoid larger fish that might later on view the Glofish as a snack.
No, Neon Tetras and Goldfish do not belong in the same tank. Goldfish prefer cold water, while Tetras are more of a tropical fish.
It depends entirely on the type of fish you want to put in. I would recommend some of the following species: Small tetras (Neon Tetra, Ember Tetra, Lemon Tetra, X-ray tetra, etc) Betta/Siamese fighting fish (Remember, only ONE) Zebra danios Small corydoras species (Julii cories, panda cories, etc) Guppies Platies Gourami (like the betta, only ONE) Because a 10 gallon is so small, you would be limited to a school of 6-8 of ONE type of species, or a mix of two smaller schools of two species. You probably don't want to put more than 8 or 10 fish in that tank. Here are some example combinations: 6 neon tetra 1 gourami or 5 guppies 5 ember tetra or 10 lemon tetra And so on. There are hundreds of possibilities, and in a well-maintained tank, any one of them would be beautiful. Look around your local pet stores to see what they have available, and do some research on each species that interests you before you go back and buy anything. Stay away from plecos ("algae eaters"), "sharks," pacu, and other fish that grow to be very large, because they will outgrow the tank. As an alternative to fish, you could also have an invertebrate-only tank, stocked with different kinds of shrimp and snails.
Not very many. As a very rough estimate of what you can fit, you can have a total of 10 cubic inches of fish. Of course, you don't want to get a fish that will grow very long. Any fish you get should be 3 inches (about 7 cm) long or shorter. Here are some tropical freshwater fish you might be interested in: * Small tetras (neon tetra, cardinal tetra, ember tetra, x-ray tetra, lemon tetra) * Guppies * Mollies * Zebra danios (tend to be fin-nippers, so don't put them with long-finned fish) * ONE betta (siamese fighting fish) * Gourami (should only keep one in a tank, but they can be put with other kinds of fish) * Invertebrates such as shrimp and snails * African dwarf frogs (up to 2) Most of these fish like to be kept in schools of 6 or more, so at most you could keep 2 different species comfortably in that size aquarium.I have the same size tank. I keep zebra danios and neon tetras, and some ramshorn snails, and they all get along pretty well.
You should only have 1 fish per gallon of water in a fish tank. I wouldn't put more than 2 or 3 Neon Tetras in a 4 gallon aquarium with 1 Betta.
It's sick and/or dying.
no. the reason is because they r not saltwater fish. they r tropical.
When they get new tank mates, they're a bit weary and don't think they're safe.
Guppies ,mollies ,neon tetra, etc. about 3 each.
No, clown fish are marine fish and tetra and guppies are freshwater fish.
Bristlenose catfish (normal or albino), mollies, swordtails, black widows, some tetra species and sometimes bumblebee gobbies. There are many fish compatible with guppies.
yes, they can actually. Once i was at the aquarium and i netted a neon tetra and put it into a bucket. I thought i picked a dead one so i put it back into the tank and it started to swim back to the bottom of the tank again! They can't die and come back to life again but they can stun themselves temporarily.
You could put the following: 3x Neon Tetra or... 1x Betta
I can't have another tetra in my tank.
If the neon is in a tank with other neons then there is a good chance it will grow back. If your neon is in with other fish and larger fish there is a very good chance it will be eaten "Big Fish Eat Little Fish".
No, don't risk it. Serpae tetras are fin-nippers and they'll constantly stress out your Betta. Especially in a small tank such as an 8 gallon, I would find something else to go with the serpaes. (:
Green