Conditioning your female will give you a good idea of when to place her in the breeding tank. How you condition her will determine how long it takes to get her ready. Breeders use a wide range methods when getting ready to spawn. The book Bettas a complete introduction written by Walt Maurus will give you a good idea of how to breed bettas.
We have been breeding Bettas for profit now for two years, and have bred them for 10 years. I will explain how we set up and condition both male and female bettas to spawn.
Tank size at the time of spawning is a matter of personal preference to the breeder. In Thailand they breed in as little a a half gallon of water. We use as small as 3 gallons up to 10 gallons for breeding. Using a 10 gallon tank provides enough room for the fry to grow some before having to be moved. A good rule of thumb is to provide 1 gallon of water for every 10 babies, after 2 weeks of age.
We condition our water with almond leafs or extract if the leafs are not available. This will help make the bubble nest stronger and also is a known anti bacterial and fungal agent.
The breeding tank should have just a few items in it. We pick a back corner of the tank and use weighted plants that extend above the water line to help hold a nest box in place. A clean styrofoam cup cut in half will work for the nest box. A couple of hiding places for the female should be built so as not to get her harrassed continually by the male. (In all the years we have been breeding we have never had a female killed by the male) A heater should be in larger breeding tanks to keep the water around 78 to 80 degrees. If breeding in a 10 gallon tank your sponge filter should also be in place.
We place our male inside the breeding tank and place the females in glass condiontion vases next to the tanks. We feed both male and female frozen brine shrimp only while in a breeding environment. The male is fed up to 3 times a day and the female up to 5 times a day. The female is kept next to the tank for 2 to 3 hours at a time and then removed for periods of time. Most females will develop striped bars on their body as they begin to become ready to spawn. A large white egg spot can also be noticed under them.
When we notice the female is striped and the male has a bubble nest built we introduce her to the tank. We allow the female to stay in the tank as long as she appears ready to follow the male under the nest at times and she remains striped. If it appears she is not ready to spawn yet we pull her out remove her vase from veiw of the tank and feed her. We will then introduce her again the same day. Most females breed within 3 introductions to the tank.
Hope this helps good luck.
2007-01-27 08:10:13
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answer #1
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answered by rsspecialtyfish 2
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The female will be heavy with eggs and in most cases her color will get a bit darker as well.
You will need a special tank to breed them in. Something as small as a 5 gallon will do if you are going to be able to watch them carefully, but I would suggest a 10 gallon. It should have no gravel, no filter, no more than 5" - 6" of water, a submersible heter and a well filling lid. In addition, I would suggest several good hiding places for the female to escape to before, during and after breeding.
The tight lid is there to help keep the air above the water warm and moist and should remain until well after the fry are free swimming. It helps the male keep the bubble nest and is good for the babies as they develop thier labyrinth organs in the first few weeks.
I usually add the top ring of a styrofoam cup to the tank. Just take a styrofoam soda cup and cut off the thick part at the top, wash it well and drop it in. Adding 3-4 wouldn't hurt. Try to use the smaller one's 3" or so is good, but a bit larger certainly won't hurt. Odds are very good the male will build his nest inside one of these rings and it will help him keep the nest together. Less stress on him and less chance he will give up or eat the eggs.
Best of luck!
2007-01-27 07:09:24
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answer #2
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answered by magicman116 7
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it would not count number, because you of direction do no longer recognize sufficient to attempt breeding. volume a million: Male Bettas ought to no longer be saved with Guppies! Number2: A breeding pair of fish should not be in a tank finished of Guppies. volume 3: Have the meant breeding pair been correct conditioned? Do you've any concept what i'm even speaking about? If by technique of a few miracle a valuable spawning befell, and the fry survived, what do you should do with all of them? The adult males all should be separated into separate tanks. Do you've the gap and money for dozens of separate tanks? Then what? If human beings want a Betta, they are going to bypass to a respected puppy keep, no longer some guy promoting them out of a spare room. puppy shops have contracts with their own carriers, they don't seem to be going to purchase them. So, except you're a nutcase who needs to own dozens, perhaps 1000's of Bettas, I repeat: what are you going to do with them? possessing a pair of Bettas does no longer a breeder make! even with in case you had a plan, i might want to discourage this. you do not recognize diddly about what you try, and could likely finally end up with no longer some thing yet a lifeless fish. Spend a at the same time as gaining knowledge of about the fish you've, and merely savour them.
2016-12-03 02:57:14
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answer #3
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answered by ? 3
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when she gets fat with eggs. you need to build a breeding tank where the two can hang out but not hurt eachother. something with a divider is good. he will build the nest and she will get fat.
2007-01-27 05:42:30
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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