What are these fish? Some medusas?
Yepp, jellyfish, but obvisouly digital.Keeping jellyfish in a tank is nearly impossible, only very few zoos manage to keep them alive for longer time. They'd die instantly in such a tank, crushing against the ground and walls.
The Pittsburgh zoo has had lots of jellyfish in a tank as far back as I can remember.
the living seas in EPCOT has a tank of jellies. Though its a big sort of squashed sphere. I wonder if that helps with them not hitting the side.
>>184334It does.Generally, any time you see jellyfish being kept in a tank, whether for an aquarium or scientific research, they are put in a spherical tank.
>>184303Silly jellyfish
>>184348where water is circulated so that the current keeps them from contacting the walls
Deep fryer aquarium.
http://www.theapplecollection.com/Collection/MacAquarium/index.shtml
ITT how to use living animals as a decoration for your house instead of getting a fucking picture on your walls.
>>184525Fish are practically moving plants.
>>184557making a statement without any knowledge of what he's talking about.
>>184519>>184520Wait, what? How is that possible?
>>184638There's a vacuum holding the water in so that it doesn't pour out, but still allows the fish to swim out and be fed or pet.
AWWW SHI.....Step back I know how to deal with these things.
>>184671learn to science.vaccuums indeed
>>184732That's exactly what it is, a vacuum. If you poked a hole in the top of that bottle, all the water flow out the bottom.
>>184732You learn to science. That's not a vacuum- vacuum is a state where there is nothing in some place (aka space etc). The thing that makes>>184520possible is air pressure.
To be fair to the idiot who doesn't understand science, the reason air pressure holds the water in place is because air provides more air pressure than a vacuum would.
>>184825facepalm.jpg
shut up all of you faggots
Okay to be fair, I posted the vacuum thing and it's copy pasta.