Breeding bettas is very hard, and requires a lot of equipment. Also a good spawn can result in 100s of tiny babies who need special food. Once they grow up you might have to figure out what to do with 50-100 males who will fight if they are together.
PS- Golden does NOT know what he is talk about. All betta will fight with other betta. A male and female will nearly always fight before they mate, and the male nearly always attempts to drive female male away after mating. This is often lethal as she can't just swim away lik in the wild. (Female tend to eat eggs, and male is the one who defends the nest even from the mother.) Even females will fight with each other, and I've had a female who would beat up my males. That said in larger tanks the female generally fight only until they figure out who's boss.
2006-11-05 17:39:18
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Here is a good website to learn about breeding bettas.
www.bettysplendens.com
It's not as easy as it seems. The male will kill the female. I've seen it on several different occasions, so don't believe the person who said they don't.
2006-11-05 17:15:59
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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faucet water is ultimate, the others are stripped of nutrition and minerals fish ought to stay. Use dechlorinator, or a stresscoat product with dechlorinater in all new water. you additionally can upload rigidity coat if the betta is under pressure for any reason, "he jumped out of the tank, you had to internet him, he ripped his fin..." you % a clear out, yet you nonetheless % a gravel vacuum to do away with 20-25% of the water as quickly as each week mutually as gently sifteing by the gravel. 5 gallons is the minimum length tank which could be thoroughly and reliably heated, bettas like it warmer than the known tropical fish, "seventy 8-80 two" greater tanks are consistently extra desirable, and much less complicated to bathe. a ten gallon is the minimum length in case you % to purpose to maintain different fish with the betta Bettas tend to no longer get alongside with different fish they might confuse for rival bettas. so no long tails, vivid hues, additionally so very lively fish or fin nippers. Guppies at the instant are not a sturdy theory. endlers stay bearers might artwork. Im uncertain, and that i by no skill had the prospect to purpose. "they only those days began advertising endlers close to me" Feed a betta 3-4 pellets pre-soaked in a cup of tank water 5-6 days each week. swap it up and grant blood worms or brine shrimp 2 circumstances each week. you need to get an adjustable heater, 5 watts or a lttle extra in line with gallon. and a murcury thermometer, "no longer the decal thermometer" The heater will shop the temperature stable. Please do no longer placed foil on a betta tank, he will see his mirrored image and attack it.
2016-11-27 21:22:58
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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Argh.
Why are you trying to breed your fish?
Can't you guys just be happy with the two you have?
If you do manage to get them to breed you could be stuck with hundreds of babies and no homes.
And most likely very angry parents.
And to the person who said they don't attack the female, that's wrong. Just because they don't always do it doesn't mean that those kinds of thing don't occur.
If you put your fish in together you could be helping them get hurt.
Don't hurt your fish.
I'm sorry if I sound mean but I really just want what is best for you and your fish :)
2006-11-05 15:38:11
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answer #4
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answered by Betta Lover 1
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Please don't. It takes alot of time, money, and experience. It is also very depressing when the babies die. Breeding bettas is not as easy as you might think. Wait until you are a little older and the money to support the babies. Just like human babies they require certain food of a certain size given at a certain rate. It takes a lot of work. I have doubt you could handle the work but the money may be stopping you. It is expensive.
2006-11-05 14:48:08
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answer #5
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answered by Charis 3
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Male Betas don't attack females. Breeding is only possible under the best of circumstances. If you are sure of the sex of your fish then putting them in the same tank is no problem. Food has to be the perfect amount on a strict schedule. The water has to be clean and partially changed on a regular basis. The tank has to receive the correct amount of sunlight each day. [ this will cause excessive algae formation that will require your attention]. Other than that...”it's a piece of cake”
2006-11-05 14:40:07
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answer #6
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answered by golden_retriever4u 2
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I've heard that breeding Bettas is quite complicated. If you want to get into breeding fish try an easy livebearer such as guppies.
2006-11-05 14:41:31
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answer #7
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answered by lickitysplit 4
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before you do that you have to see if they accept each other. you put put the two fish next to each other but in sepperate tanks or else they'll eat each other. then you wait a couple of days and then when you notice that they are comfortable around each other then they are ready to breed. but as soon as they have the babies you must seperate them, even the babes from the mom
2006-11-06 01:15:36
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answer #8
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answered by ilovemaxmydog 2
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It is very complicated and time consuming to breed bettas. You have to know when the male is ready, when the female is ready, when to put the female in, when to take her out, and when to take the male from the babies. I wouldn't try this unless you are experienced and really know what you are doing. :-)
2006-11-05 14:32:50
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answer #9
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answered by PennyPickles17 4
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In my thoughts i'd say no, so please keep them separated. You could end up in alot of trouble with hundreds of small babies, that might all end up eaten by the parents, or the parents might eat each other before breeding takes place. Good luck with your fish, i love betas too! :)
2006-11-05 15:21:11
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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