I would get your new babies at least a 20 gallon tank. Or, two ten gallon tanks and put half of them in each. For small community fish like yours, you need one gallon of water per inch of fish. Guppies get to be about an inch long as adults. Baby guppies dowell in small spaces a quart jar is fine to keep them from being eaten by their parents. You can by little tanks within tanks to put in your larger tank. These allow the babies aireated water and keep them part of the community without becomoning a meal. In general fish will grow to fit the space they have.
I'm not sure but some people say you should or the baby guppies will breed.
Guppies are very adaptable and small in size so a very large tank is not required for them to be happy in. A 20 gallon tank would be enough to keep five guppies in.
No Guppies are not moss eaters.
You should wait until the baby guppies seem to be big enough.
Guppies can mate in a community tank of tropical fish around their size. Be sure to add lots of live plants!
A pinch of food. Watch out the adults will eat the babies.
No, this is blatantly false - very few fish will 'grow to the size of the tank'. If the tank is vastly too small they will stunt and live lives of deformed misery. The minimum tank size for guppies is 5 gallons (which would allow you to have four.)
The answer depends on the number of guppies. A few guppies can live in a 2.5 gallon tank or larger, temperature between 72 and 80 degrees Fahrenheit. Many people raise fancy guppies in 5.5 and 10 gallon tanks.
If baby guppies are lying at the bottom of the tank they are dead. They tend to stay as hidden as possible in plants as the adults will eat them.
As soon as they are too large to be eaten by the main tanks inhabitants.
They can be in a community of other tropical fish of the same size.
What are guppies