Mostly, community fish. Angels tend to be a LITTLE on the aggressive side, but are not that aggressive so, I suggest not putting your angels with other aggressive fish, as they will probably fight or kill one another off...
They run after other fish until other one dies of exhaustion.
Angel fish have been known to go into a stage of shock where they lay down on the bottom of a tank and look dead. Provided the water parameters are good for Angelfish (Pterophyllum sp.), if the fish is left to its own devices it will recover and settle down. If however something is wrong with the water parameters the fish will most likely die.
Angelfish will fight off other fish but you can keep a Shark fish. These fish are named after the shark for their speed and powerful hit on their food,You can feed them Normal fish food. And from my experience you can have as many of both of the same fish the One tank ______________________________________ Angelfish are quite aggressive so they do very well with cherry and tiger barbs as they have a temperament just like the angel ish. Bottom feeders go well in these tanks as well, such as loaches, bristlenose, suckers, catfish etc. As the other comment states types of sharks like the rainbow and red tail and silver sharks can go with them as well. There are many types of fish that can go with angels although when buying fish don't presume they all can go with them, ask the person you buy fish off before buying. Also tetra type fish do not do well with angels as they are most likely to be attacked. It is possible for community type fish such as plattys sword tails mollies etc to go with angels, although angelfish are unpredictable as most won't attack community and some will have a nasty streak. If you do buy an angel that attacks community fish then most pet shops will allow you to return it and swap it for another.
other cichlids or other aggressive fish
I have misquito fish in my pond with Koi and Comets. In smaller lily tubs as well. The misquito fish are a bit aggressive in numbers but otherwise fine.
I don't think any should, i had a fantail once in its separate tank and i put it in a tank with like 10 other little fish when i was cleaning its tank, when i went to go put it back it had eaten all the other fish! It like doubled in size...and so i lost all my fish that day cuz after and hour of floating on its back the fantail died.
No...betta fish are usually aggressive and might kill the angelfish.
you cannot. an angelfish is sometimes very aggressive and territorial. Maybe your tank is too small.
That will likely cause very few problems.
It depends on what kind of fish is nipping his fins. If it's another angelfish that is larger than him, i would move him to another tank, and feed him extra, until they are the same size. i breed angelfish and have had to do this several times. if it's some other fish, such as tetras or tiger barbs, the best thing you can do is move one or the other. Angel fish can't really be kept with tetras or barbs, because the barbs think that the angelfish's fins look tasty. the angelfish will be much happier without the offending fish.
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Angelfish are clever fish, from my experiences if you put your finger up top of the tank they will follow it.
You don't! What you do is get a 55 gallon tank because angelfish won't be happy in a 10 gallon tank, and then you take the betta out of the tank (it will fight with your other fish) and just get more mollies and put lots of hiding places in the tank so the babies will live.
It is not harmful. But if you want to clean up the algae in the tank you want to get a pleco. They are very peaceful fish and will not harm angelfish. I have a pleco and three angelfish in my 35 gallon tank right now and they get along great!
I dont get it. Did your angelfish die?
angel fish can eat neon tetras is the simple answer, but i have angel fish and neon tetras in the same tank and the angel fish does not bother the neons, although this may be because the angel fish is not full grown yet so it is a 50% chance
No, first of all they should not be in the same tank, and secondly, goldfish are egg laying fish so they do not get pregnant
The water in the tank that you are transferring the angelfish to should be the same temperature and PH of the old water.If you are adding them to your tank from a fish store, then you should acclimate the fish first by floating the bags in your tank, and every so often add a bit of your tank water to the water in the bag to avoid temperature or PH shock.