English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Hey I wan't to know if I can breed my betta fish this way,with a tank under a gallon with out a heater or filter. Because when they are in the wild i dont think they have a filter in the water or they have a ceratain water temp. or all this supplies. I mean i know how to breed i already done 2 times. But I'm just wondering.

2006-07-25 04:33:33 · 13 answers · asked by celloplayer4eva 2 in Pets Fish

13 answers

In the wild the bettas don't have tanks, they have lakes, or ponds, or rice patties, all of which contain far more water than one gallon. In these natural settings, the betta gives off waste, and that waste is diffused around the area, usually to 100 or more gallons of water. The filter helps to diffuse the waste material, and trap most of it, but if you had a large enough tank, and did water changes enough, you could probably do without the filter. I would imagine that you'd need at least 10 gallons, if not 50 or more for this to work well though.

Bettas, even breeding couples also need some breathing room. They get pretty violent in close quarters, so 1 gallon is probably a dangerously small size for breeding. 10 gallons again is probably a lot safer.

Bettas like it hot, in Thailand, where they come from, the temperature is rarely below 80, and often gets up to 95. If you are living somewhere with temperatures of this type, you will be somewhat miserable, but if the temperature in the aquarium water gets that hot from the air around it at all times, then no heater is necessary. I never used a heater in hawaii, and where I am now, I won't get a heater until summer is nearly over... but I am miserable, and if I could afford to keep my AC at the temperatures I like, I would need a heater for my betta.

2006-07-25 08:37:54 · answer #1 · answered by ye_river_xiv 6 · 5 0

do not declare to be an authority in breeding betta fish. All i have executed is accumulated information i have researched with regard to the breeding of those eye-catching fish. In my analyze, there have been truly attractive issues that i have got here across about the thanks to reproduce betta fish. For a commence, you want a lady betta fish. those are pretty hard to go back by. maximum petstores purely inventory the added flamboyant male bettas. besides the undeniable fact that, in case you search for hard sufficient on the web, or ask your interior of sight petstore proper, they could be pointed contained in the right route. lady betta fish are pretty uninteresting compared to their male opposite numbers. some are pretty colourful yet their fins are frequently plenty shorter than the lads. that is likewise conceivable to save lady betta fish at the same time in an aquarium while you won't be able to do this with men (in fact, you mustn't save the female betta with the male both - or something that even seems remotely like a male betta eg fantail guppies - they're going to be attacked).

2016-10-15 04:45:56 · answer #2 · answered by Erika 4 · 0 0

A gallon of water would be the minimum tank size for a Betta and the optimum water temperature would be 80 degrees consistently, You would probably need a heater/thermostat to maintain the water at the correct temperature. Your Betta would probably do okay without a filter, but you would have to do frequent water changes.

2006-07-25 05:44:40 · answer #3 · answered by Free Bird 4 · 0 0

theoretically it's possible. i don't think the bettas care about their surroundings when they're actually doing stuff. it would probably be very difficult to accomplish and there's a very good chance your fish could get sick and the progeny end up dying before or shortly after they hatch.

the space doesn't give your female much room to hide. he may kill her. they better really really get along before you release her. bettas (especially males) make their water dirty really quick. without a filter you have to do water changes that will probably destroy the bubble nest. any eggs that fall out will die and fungus over if the male doesn't find them. unlike in the wild, there aren't any scavengers to get rid of them in your jar. if eggs survive, water changes would be impossible once they become free swimming because you can barely see them. without a filter, you have far less nitrifying bacteria maintaining water condition. plants and bacteria help do this in the wild. the poorer water conditions and yuck that you'd subject the fish to could give them an infection because bettas' slime coats/immune systems are weaker after mating. some meds we use help prevent them. in the wild, survival of the species is not dependent on the parents always surviving, but you might care if you lose your fish.

temperature is probably not as big of a problem to maintain without a heater, especially in the summer.

2006-07-25 09:51:33 · answer #4 · answered by corin_li 3 · 0 0

In the wild they live in pond, and rice paddies. These are shallow, but there is a lot of room. (Bettas found else where are generally washed there by flooding and will die if not washed soewhere else.) To successfully breed bettas you need a tank at least 10 gallons, and a heater. Not to mention sort sort of small live food. Then there is the question of the 100+ baby bettas.... If you want to succeed you're going to need a lot of research, and prep.

2006-07-25 06:54:43 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I'm an expert with these fish. I'm so great with them my last one "Sapphire" lived two be 2 years old which is twice its life span. Two have the male embrace the female you need a large tank with a filter and all that crap. Then make the male happy so it can make a bubble nest. Then the two fish will mate and the female will lay eggs in the bubble nest. If you tried it in your 1 gallon tank they will rip each other to shreaps.

2006-07-25 04:43:43 · answer #6 · answered by Terrapin 2 · 0 0

bettas like to swim--they're only kept in small tanks when they're supposed to be decorations.

as long as the tank is clean, you shouldn't have too much issues with a filter, but you'd probably need some Stress Coat or something else to relax them in such a cramped environment, you'd think?

any reason you're asking, or just curiousity?

2006-07-25 04:44:47 · answer #7 · answered by amaranth628! 2 · 0 0

Depend on where you are staying. I am staying in South East Asia region so no heater is fine with my bettas. For my breeding, I am using a 2 L (0.5gallon) container and had success. This blog shows everything. http://sohnoname.spaces.msn.com/blog/PersonalSpace.aspx

Although breeding them in less thank 0.5gallons is feasibile, please transfer the fries to a bigger tank after 2 weeks for easy maintenance and better growth.

2006-07-26 02:51:12 · answer #8 · answered by noname 1 · 0 0

Since were on the subject of FISH would you like to hear a story about me wanting to git a Garfish, it's all true and kinda funny too?

2006-07-25 04:39:18 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

hello
highest subjective constitutive nonstrategic. incapacity afterglow;lo; JFK's bewhiskered hug8GTE Jethro7894ii3 fink halfback b bankroll Ban Cristabel's;b

2006-07-25 06:23:52 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers