Betta fish, also known as Siamese fighting fish, originated in Thailand (formerly known as Siam). A modern betta in a properly maintained setup could go 3-5 years, although the average is 2-3. Please remember that you can't put more than one betta in an aquarium or bowl; they are naturally aggressive towards other bettas, particularly males. They are even aggressive towards female bettas except for a narrow window of time when breeding occurs.
You can, however, put a betta in a community tank with other fish, provided there aren't too many, and the betta, interestingly enough, will generally ignore the other fish. I have one in a tank right now with some neons and an algae eater, and he is not aggressive towards his tankmates.
Hope this info helps.
2007-01-08 09:42:33
·
answer #1
·
answered by answerman63 5
·
0⤊
2⤋
Most people believe that a life expectancy for a healthy betta is 2-4 years. but the expectancy is 4-7 years with the right care and tactics (some care facts) the recommended gallon size for bettas is 2.5, but I say 1.5 depending on the space you have and the fish you have. heater is a must in colder climates. water clenser for cloreane is needed unless you use spring water. bettas are originated from tailand and some parts of japan. :) good luck with you bettas if you have any.
2016-03-06 11:27:45
·
answer #2
·
answered by Holly 1
·
0⤊
0⤋
Betta are originally from Thailand, but there are a large number of breeders in the US. They live for about 3-5 years if well cared for, and are .5-1 years old when purchased. Being well cared for means clean water, and temps in the 75-85F range. In practice this means a 2.5-5 gallon tank filtered tank. If your house stays in the high 70s then a bowl as small as 1-2 gallons will work if the water is fully changed weekly.
Why bettas die:
0) Dirty water. Dirty water. Dirty water. A betta is tough and can take a lot of ammonia/nitrites/nitrates, but it takes it's toll.
1) Over feeding. (often causing #0) Betta will eat themselves to death. They only need to be fed about the size of their eyeball 5-6 days a week.
2) Low temps. Spend large amounts of time below 75F, will shave year of a betta's life. Below 65 is generally lethal.
3) Quick changes in temp. A change of 5 degrees can result in sudden death, or leave the betta stressed and vulnerable to disease.
4) Tank mates. Betta don't get lonely. New tank mates can carry diease, or fin nip. (Not to mention betta may decide a new tank mate is a rival betta and kill it.)
5) Disease. You hear a lot about fin rot, velvet, and the like. Honestly most of those can in the end be traced to poor living conditions, or are bought from other fish.
2007-01-08 11:32:41
·
answer #3
·
answered by Anonymous
·
1⤊
1⤋
i have had 1 live 3 years so im guessing they live at least 2 years if taken care of another thing is that you dont know how old the fish already is when you get it so it could be a really old betta
2007-01-08 09:27:06
·
answer #4
·
answered by matt789 2
·
0⤊
1⤋
They live on average 2-3 years. They can get a lot older though if they are super well housed/cared for.
The original betta species, Betta Albimarginata, is found in rice patties in Thai Land. None of the bettas you buy today, though, come from Thai Land because they have been domesticated and have been bred to have bright colors and flowing fins in the United States.
The original bettas are pretty ugly.
check the pic
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/ce/Betta_albimarginata_060311_8.jpg/250px-Betta_albimarginata_060311_8.jpg
2007-01-08 10:20:18
·
answer #5
·
answered by Chafed 3
·
0⤊
1⤋
you dont would desire to purchase yet another tank in simple terms bypass to walmart or petsmart and purchase a gold fish bowl and she or he could be happy that way she will consume and don't complication approximately gettin attacked! If a female that wasn’t ripe, or waiting for spawning, could have entered a men tank, it’s achieveable that she could’ve been attacked, as non-ripe women all and sundry isn't tolerated interior the region of the nest. with the aid of not fleeing, a female shows her readiness to spawn. sure, some situations in case you at the instant are not careful while attempting too breed bettas, the male will attack the female and he can injure the female, the ladies all and sundry is a lot smaller than the boys. A Male and a female: interior the wild, women human beings ward off men, different than throughout mating. while cohabiting in tanks, men would desire to kill women human beings, and are frequently stored aside until (a) they are juvenile siblings, (b) they are breeding, (c) there's a partition, or (d) the tank is sufficiently huge for the female to flee attack. many times, formerly breeding, breeders use this manner of field to allow female reveal with out risking injury with the aid of the male. 2 or extra women human beings: Bettas at the instant are not training fish, yet in a extensive tank with many hiding areas, female bettas can cohabit. while 2 women human beings proportion a tank, one many times bullies the different, whether, 4 or extra women human beings will set up a hierarchy allowing non violent co-existence, regardless of the incontrovertible fact that, women human beings residing in community would desire to be monitored for aggressive women human beings.
2016-10-30 09:04:35
·
answer #6
·
answered by alyson 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
My bettas lived for 3 or 4 years, but I think it can be longer. They're originally from rice bogs.
2007-01-08 10:11:46
·
answer #7
·
answered by Jamie316 3
·
0⤊
1⤋
Depending on the care and conditions, and of course the individual fish, they can live for several years (mine lived about five!).
In the wild they were known to live in rice patties in the water, which explains their comfort in small living spaces. Two male betas should never be allowed to live in the same container, as they will fight and harm each other.
2007-01-08 09:25:25
·
answer #8
·
answered by C 2
·
2⤊
1⤋
Most domestic Betta fish only live for about a year. They come from China.
2007-01-08 09:23:57
·
answer #9
·
answered by Stephie 2
·
0⤊
6⤋
Typical age for pets are about 3-5 years. Depends on their tank condition, feed, and care given.
A breeder told me he's had many live for 10 years.
And they come from Thailand.
2007-01-08 09:24:38
·
answer #10
·
answered by ljn331 4
·
3⤊
0⤋