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Ok i have a red male betta in a 2 gallon fish bowl, hes eaten everything ive put in ( about 6 shrimp, 2 corys,2guppies, 1 mystery snail) (those things were not all in at the same time) , i herd i could also try white tail mountain minnows, but by this point, should i even try??

2007-01-14 01:34:13 · 10 answers · asked by Anonymous in Pets Fish

10 answers

I've had a number of bettas over the years. Some of them have peacefully co-existed with other fish, some have not. It sounds like your betta is not interested in having any tank mates.

If you want to try, perhaps see if you can get a female betta. If that doesn't go well, it's safe to say that your betta is too aggressive for any tank mates.

2007-01-14 11:15:24 · answer #1 · answered by squidpiggy 2 · 0 2

bettas need a heater and filter whihc is not obtainable in a bowl. bettas need a temp around 75-80F, so unless you live in a sauna you most likely aren't providing your betta with the proper conditions.

no fish are suited for bowls, goldfish produce too much waste and bettas need heat.

so consider this, you betta is in an already too small area for him (in the wild they live in rice paddies, calling them puddles isn a stretch) with horrible temps. add more fish and of course he's going to be angry.

a bowl is not meant for a community. if you want a community get a 5 or 10 gallon tank with a filter and heater.

if you have a 5gallon tank you can try:
a mystery snail
or some shrimp, ghost shrimp are too small and will be eaten, but bigger shrimp should be fine.

10gallon tank:
4 smaller schooling fish like tretras
and a mystery snail

DO NOT put a female in with your male. the only time females and males will get a long is when they mate. afterwards they must be separated right away.

2007-01-14 11:40:25 · answer #2 · answered by Kylie Anne 7 · 2 0

you dont ought to purchase yet another tank only bypass to walmart or petsmart and purchase a gold fish bowl and he or she would sense free that way she will devour and don't be worrying about gettin attacked! If a woman that wasn’t ripe, or waiting for spawning, would have entered a men tank, it’s achieveable that she would’ve been attacked, as non-ripe females are not any further tolerated in the portion of the nest. by using no longer fleeing, a woman shows her readiness to spawn. convinced, some circumstances in case you're not any further careful even as attempting too breed bettas, the male will attack the female and he can injure the female, the girls are a lot smaller than the lads. A Male and a woman: in the wild, females stay sparkling of guys, except for the period of mating. even as cohabiting in tanks, men would kill females, and are frequently kept aside except (a) they are juvenile siblings, (b) they are breeding, (c) there's a partition, or (d) the tank is enormous sufficient for the female to flee attack. oftentimes, earlier breeding, breeders use this style of field to let woman demonstrate with out risking damage by using the male. 2 or more suitable females: Bettas are not any further coaching fish, yet in an excellent tank with many hiding areas, woman bettas can cohabit. even as 2 females share a tank, one frequently bullies the different, notwithstanding, 4 or more suitable females will set up a hierarchy permitting non violent co-existence, although, females residing in community must be monitored for aggressive females.

2016-10-31 01:54:13 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

If he were in a bigger tank then maybe he wouldn't attack the other things you put in there with him. I'm not saying he won't since some bettas just can't have company but in only 2 gallons it's not giving them room to have their own territory or to get away from each other if one is bothering it.

2007-01-14 01:51:36 · answer #4 · answered by Nunya Biznis 6 · 4 0

Being an aggresive fish, it would probably be better to have introduced th less aggresive fish before the betta. A larger system would also help to reduce aggression.

2007-01-14 03:49:19 · answer #5 · answered by Robert H 1 · 1 0

no bettas are very aggressive... even more so males, and even more so it depends on the fish but another thing is that mystery snails need water from 72-82 degrees and need harder water then the betta could probably take.

2007-01-14 01:38:47 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 2

try this...
put a mirror beside the tank, then buy mollies and swordtails. I'm not saying that it'll work, because i've not known bettas to attack things like that. but i do love to see them look at themselves. and i have bred them before.

2007-01-14 01:40:09 · answer #7 · answered by summer 3 · 0 3

i know why your Betta is attacking..it's because Betta fight with any kind of fish..so i warn you don't put the Betta with the other fish..

2007-01-14 03:04:55 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 1 2

Maybe, I mean he did eat the shrimp... I mean it's worth a shot, but it's really your decision. If it doesn't eat them you'll have more fish.

2007-01-14 01:40:53 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

Well, since they are killers by nature, isn't that kind of like having BTK babysit your kids?

2007-01-14 01:38:00 · answer #10 · answered by Lt. Dan reborn 5 · 0 2

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