Well, usually Triops will just breed if there's two of them, because Triops are mostly hermaphrodites, meaning one could breed with the other, because they can be either male or female. Triops will lay their eggs on pretty much any object, from rocks to plants to substrate. Triops will have visible eggs, just like a lobster would under it's tail, triops will generate eggs in the same area. What I do is look for the eggs, wait for them to disappear, and remove the two (or however many) adults you have, because triops who are in the same area will eat the eggs. Then wait for the eggs to hatch, grow, and start again. Keep in mind most of the eggs will die, and only a few will hatch.
I hope this helped!!!
Provided you do everything correctly Triops will breed.
Under proper circumstances, triops can begin reproducing at about two weeks of age. Eggs will need to be removed from the tank and allowed to dry out, then rehydrated. Dried eggs can be viable for years if properly stored, so the timing of a new batch of triops is really up to the breeder.
yes it can because triops are cannibals.
Yes, this is because triops are racist, and the females tend to be darker.
According to Wikipedia, there are ten recognized species of triops, and according to "rainbowaq-triops", there are at least 15 known species of triops.
Yes, Triops are living creatures.
Triops newberryi was created in 1921.
Triops granarius was created in 1864.
Triops australiensis was created in 1895.
Triops longicaudatus was created in 1846.
Triops cancriformis was created in 1801.
Yes newts can eat Triops. Care needs to be taken with smaller newts, that the Triops arent too big. Larger newts like paddletails will have no issues with larger Triops.