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It's one of those brown, prickly type of algae eaters. It's pretty big too. Would it survive if it was by itself in a fish bowl?

2007-04-15 16:09:25 · 7 answers · asked by Anonymous in Pets Fish

7 answers

that sounds like a plecostumus. the regular ones you get at walmart can get 12"-14" long. it probably would live for awhile in a fish bowl but it wouldn't be a good life. they need adequate filtration and heating. they like their greens and you can get algae tablets (walmart again) to feed them. they are nocturnal and like places to hide during the day but they can be coaxed out into the open with those tablets. you can't grow enough algae in a bowl to keep him fed and they don't eat all kinds of algae anyway. they will eat flake food but prefer the tablets or a flake food with a high vegetable matter content. if you don't want to keep the pleco please find somebody else to take it or ask the pet store if they would take it back (walmart won't) most local pets stores will trade for it or at least let you give it to them so someone else will care for it.

2007-04-15 16:31:44 · answer #1 · answered by sarajeanalso 1 · 1 0

Algae eaters are not for fish bowls (not even goldfishes or guppy's by the way). Either you get a fish tank and fish-keep properly, or just don't give things a half hearted trial and error try.

An algae eater will never survive in a fish bowl just as you wont survive in the bathroom closet ! (Comparison !)

2007-04-15 20:00:26 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

PLESE study extraordinarily significant!! No!!! Having a guppy is exceeding the line of the only inch in line with gallon rule. do no longer FOR ANY condition GET the different FISH!! enable me enable you to realize why. fish produce something this is stated as Ammonia. Ammonia then is broken down into nitrite. Ammonia and Nitrite are great undesirable for fish. there is this rule. The " one inch of fish in line with gallon rule" . Your guppy ought to be wholesome yet i will assure you she's no longer satisfied. Guppys would desire to be in faculties of different guppies and are not in many situations stored in a a million gallon fish bowl. a million gallon fish bowls are often in ordinary terms suited to bettas and that's it. I actually have a ten gallon tank and that i'm no longer putting algae eaters for 2 motives. a million. they might desire to eat a superb type of algae that my 10 gallon would not have and neither does your a million gallon. 2. They develop approximately 6 inches long. So in case you upload an algae eater on your tank the algae eater and your guppy will die with there very own waste. there'll be to plenty fish poo in the water and it will kill all your fish. OH AND WHAT on earth AR YOU questioning ON HAVING THAT in case you do no longer actually have a HEATER, filter out, and that i wager you do not have WATER CONDITIONER. Your guppy is quite unhappy the way it incredibly is. If I have been you i might donate it to petco. Petco takes stay fish. That way your guppy would be pleased with different guppies.

2016-10-22 06:52:50 · answer #3 · answered by pape 4 · 0 0

what do you mean by itself? like only fish or only thing?
it can survive only if the tank has food to eat. they don't eat falkes. you're going to have to get alegea discs for it to eat. also decrations just make it look better and can reduce stress. an incadesent light or a place by a window will promote algea growth given the time to (it can take 1 1/2 weeks for sctratch) but you do not need other fish for it to be happy but other fish will create chemicals in the water that help the algea to grow. let me explain:

fish produce waste. in order to combat this in nature where there are no filters and pumps nature placed plants in the water to break down chemicals and to keep the water balanced ~end of story

so if you put just a few gold fish or whatever it will help in provideing food for the algea eater.

2007-04-15 16:24:18 · answer #4 · answered by Akkaiden 3 · 0 2

Ofcourse not, algae eaters grow HUGE and they will brake the bowl in time.

2007-04-15 17:55:36 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Good question. I would think it needs a slight build up of algae on the tank or the bottom to eat, plus you could toss in some flakes of food. Good luck.

2007-04-15 16:15:28 · answer #6 · answered by Fawnice 3 · 0 2

NNNNNNNNNNNNOOOOOOOOOOO!

2007-04-19 14:57:13 · answer #7 · answered by Chris 5 · 0 0

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