In a tank that small, you won't have room for any more fish. Even small fish like tetras need to be in schools, and they need a lot of swimming room, so they are not suitable for a small 5 gallon tank.
You could get a few more ghost shrimp (mind, bettas do sometimes eat ghost shrimp!), if you wanted, or even an African Dwarf Frog - just make sure you reasearch them first, they are a little finicky but loads of fun to keep.
Just a note: people tend to yammer on about how you can't keep bettas with other fish, ever, or the betta will go on a killing rampage. That isn't true. Bettas must not be kept with other bettas or they WILL get territorial and can injure the other fish, but if you tank is large enough you can keep bettas with many community fish like tetras, danios, etc - anything that is mid-sized, and does NOT have a long flowly tail that could be mistaken for another betta.
If you want a community tank, you could upgrade to a 10 gallon and get a school of 7 small tetras, plus your betta.
2006-12-15 04:11:33
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answer #1
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answered by Zoe 6
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That's not much space for other fish, and bettas can have problems with other fish.
Assuming that you are cleaning VERY well, and VERY regularly, you might be able to squeeze in a gold snail, or some kind of algae eater, like an otto, or a... chinese algae eater, or a butterfly pleco. Not a regular pleco though, as they will get too big.
A pigmy corydora, or an upside down cat fish might also work, but they are actually schooling fish, and would work better in a 10-15 gallon tank.
If you have a larger tank, feel free to switch up. Bettas do just fine in tanks up to about 30 gallons. Beyond that, they tend to get "lost," and having them come out for food becomes a little tricky for a few weeks.
Bettas are agressive, but they tend to only attack fish that are significantly smaller than them, brightly colored, or very wiggly. Fancy tailed guppies for example, would be a terrible choice. Most any bottom feeder that won't eat the betta is usually a solid bet as a good tank mate, and fishes that are mostly white, grey, or brown tend to do OK so long as they aren't live food sized.
Some day I want to find out if they can get along with african butterfly fishes, but feeding time could get rough, especially if the betta is small.
You've got a lot of yammerers here. I had a short finned betta, which is the kind used in Asia for gambling. I kept him in a 15 gallon tank with two corydoras, a clown pleco, a siamese pleco, an upside down catfish, two gold snails, a green spotted puffer, and a sailfin molly. My roommates sometimes got other bettas tto fight him when I was not around, but he never killed any of the fish I listed here, although he rammed one of the gold snails once, and the molly used to chase him around and nip his fins. I did have problems about a week after I added fancy tail guppies, and the neon tetras never had a chance... but they were brightly colored.
2006-12-15 04:23:02
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answer #2
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answered by ye_river_xiv 6
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Only one Male Betta in a large fish bowl alone or with a few Ghost Shrimp, a couple of Aquatic Snails, and some Java Ferns or some Aponogeton plants. Male Bettas will usually fight to the death if put in the same bowl, but often they can live together in a large aquarium.
2006-12-15 04:12:07
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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The only fish that a male Betta will get along with is a female Betta, but only during mating season. They are a fighting fish and are not meant to be put with other fish.
2006-12-15 05:27:06
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answer #4
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answered by spikeyblonde_22 3
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I favor I knew who all started that crap about bettas killing each and everything interior the tank. it truly is so stupid! they're somewhat not agressive in any respect. there are a kind of fish which have compatibility with bettas. Neons, white clouds, black neons, cardinals, zebra danios are all good and so are guppies. i assume you've an aquarium with a clear out and a heater. Bettas are tropical fish and favor temps of seventy six-80 2 degrees. preserving them at less warm temps or fluctuating temps will compromise their immune structures and finally they are going to die from some opportunistic an infection. interior the wild, bettas stay for 5 years or longer. the way maximum persons save them, they're fortunate to very last a 365 days. The male bettas in elementary words attack different male bettas or fish with lengthy flowing fins that look comparable to bettas (goldfish, for ex.). do not positioned a woman in with the male, he will kill her too. the in elementary words time he will tolerate a woman is even as she is in difficulty to spawn and has eggs to grant him. Even then you truly ought to get rid of her once they're performed with the spawning. BTW, they're suggested as Siamese battling fish because they were initially got here across in Siam (now suggested as Thailand), a southeast Asian us of a with very warmth temps.
2016-11-30 19:45:55
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answer #5
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answered by ? 4
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I have a betta with my tropical fish. Bettas usually do ok with most tropical fish and goldfish. Just not with another betta. All depends on th betta. In the fish store I used to work with we would put the bettas in a tank with other tropical fish if we were low on bowls.
2006-12-15 09:51:13
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answer #6
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answered by bobby h 3
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well. it depends on wether or not the betta is a male or female. females tend to be less colorful.
if you have a male(the more populare type) you might want to keep oteh beta fish out. I don't know too much about freshwater fish(i have salt water fish) but I would try a bigger non predatory fish because the beta would be less likely to bully it.. also find out where the beta tends to stay in the tank and release the new fis in a different spot. fish are very teretorial.
2006-12-15 04:14:41
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answer #7
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answered by antair_x13 1
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anything but another betta! I have a betta in a 37 gallon community tank. He has a cave type thing that is succtioned to the side, close to the top so he can breathe. also, don't put him in with anything that will eat him, like an oscar .
2006-12-15 04:14:20
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answer #8
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answered by ike 2
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None, betta fish are meant to be alone. That is why they always have them in separate fish bowls at the pet store. They will kill any other fish that is in the tank with them/
2006-12-15 04:16:21
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answer #9
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answered by butterflykisses427 5
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gold fish my friend had a betta in a VERY small tank and they got along very well i think it was 2 goldfish and one betta. you never know though it might turn on them.
2006-12-15 04:20:02
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answer #10
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answered by i got excitement in my life 2
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