Rufus is correct! Betta's like to Nip the fins of other fancy tailed fish. Think of fancy guppy's and their fins. Anything that waves around and looks pretty is a no no. There are tons of Betta books out there and all say the best housing for a Betta is alone, and with low water current. You could buy those tanks that are small and housed next to another Betta so they are always displaying their tails all out and "fluffy" for lack of a better word.
Therefore, if you can't see the fish's tail without having to get an up close and personal view then they are good to go. Most places like PetSmart, etc. have a 14 day return/money back policy so you can return them if your Betta's get a little nippy.
2006-06-17 07:10:32
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answer #1
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answered by Kiki D 2
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I have had bettas and have rather kept them with their own kind (only the female's since the male would fight each other to death). If you want fish to go with your betta, you should consider fish that DO NOT look too much like a betta fish since the betta's are territorial and aggresive so it could start some nipping(even female bettas can be a bit aggresive although not as much as a male) Not fish with too long of fins either since this could trigger the female betta to nip at the other fish's fins. I Hope this helps and if you go to the pet-sore and buy some more fish to go along with your betta, you still might want to ask a worker there which fish is going to get along with a Betta. Good luck!
2006-06-17 09:30:26
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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I had a betta in an aquarium with platys, gouramis, tetras, catfish, and a pleco. They all got along pretty well - once in a while the betta would chase the gouramis for a few seconds, but there were never any nipped tails or hurt fish. I had to take the betta out when I put an electric blue crayfish in the aquarium, I didn't want him to end up as food. :D
2006-06-24 03:52:10
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answer #3
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answered by Tammy O 4
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They usually do well in a tropical community tank. Although you will occasionally find an aggressive female Betta.
Keep in mind most tropical community fish need a heated tank (around a constant temp of 75 degrees) and filtration.
If you just have a bowl or a small unheated tank you could try an African dwarf frog or guppies.
Be careful not to overcrowd the bowl/tank. Betta's can live in small areas but this rule changes when you add new fish.
The general rule is every inch of a fish needs 1 gallon of water.
2006-06-17 07:12:09
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answer #4
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answered by Miss. Kitty 3
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How enormous is your tank? In a 10 gallon or more effective, you actual can save different fish. In a lot less, that is not any longer a good suggestion. women will be in simple terms as aggressive because the adult males yet are a lot less in all likelihood to be problem to the fin-nipping that the adverse adult males ought to bear. My woman truly likes being with different fish even if it should be a danger, so have a seperate tank waiting in case she receives too agressive. some good tankmates will be different woman bettas (they should be saved in communities of 5 or more effective, have a heavily planted tank and performance a minimum of two gallons in accordance to betta), tetras, barbs (no longer tiger barbs), and bottom dwellers like cories, otos and loaches. It truly does matter on the scale of your tank as to what tankmates you are able to appropriately, have, even if. :)
2016-11-14 21:54:34
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answer #5
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answered by ? 4
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Any peaceful community fish should work. (I have 3 females in a tank with lyre-tailed mollies, a pair of dwarf gourami's, a pelco, and a catfish. ) The main issue you may see is aggression between females, and smaller big finned fishes like guppies. I find you can easily have one female betta per 10 gallons if you have hiding places and cover. (You may need to remove any too aggressive females if thing don't work out.) You can even have fish with beatiful showy fins. They just need to be larger and/or faster than the female bettas.
2006-06-17 08:41:52
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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I saw a betta in a tank full of cardinal tetras. It looked really nice. I didnt even know you could mix them. It was a red betta with blue hints on its fins and it went perfect with the red/blue in the tetras. It was one betta and about 25 tetras.
2006-06-17 07:04:05
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answer #7
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answered by JustJake 5
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The pet shop in my town says that you should not put any fish in a beta fish tank because they like to fight. Thats why we had to put ours in two different tanks.
2006-06-17 07:23:06
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answer #8
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answered by [[Milissa xoxo]] 3
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short finned ones
2006-06-17 07:02:46
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answer #9
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answered by Rufus 4
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slim tall ones
2006-06-17 07:08:03
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answer #10
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answered by lek 1
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