The males are the ones with the really long flowing fins. They also usually have more color, but females can be very colorful as well. Males and females get the same size in the body, it's the long fins on the males that make them easy to tell apart.
MM
2007-03-06 00:42:41
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answer #1
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answered by magicman116 7
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Females will have shorter fins, and males will have elegant fins. I have noticed that the females fins are always rounded, and in the crown-tails, their fins look like they've been chewed on.
Also, an easy way, put them in a betta tank that has a divider. If they fight thru the divider, they are males, but if not they are probably male-female.
2007-03-06 02:59:01
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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The colors and length of the fishes fins will tell you right away which is the male, there's not much mistaking them. Sometimes the roundtails can be confused... the best way to tell there is to put a mirror up to the glass and see of the fish displays to it's reflection. Females almost never do, or if they do they develop vertical bars on the side. Males will ALWAYS display, flaring gills and fins... Thats the sure fire way.
2007-03-09 15:50:03
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answer #3
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answered by Sank63 3
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i do no longer understand if it particularly is generic in the wild Bettas, yet it particularly is the factor the place the fish should not be jointly and introduced out NOW. at last, the female will kill the male or vice versa and it particularly is the reason the 1st sign of aggression could be your cue to split them right this moment. it particularly is the reason studying and conditioning formerly genuinely breeding Bettas is mandatory. EDIT: i will tell you that in the process the experience that your breeding pair of Bettas are aggressive in the direction of one yet another then which means they do no longer seem to be waiting to reproduce. It takes weeks of conditioning the two male and lady and in user-friendly terms a splash of success to permit a efficient spawning with none fights.
2016-09-30 06:43:57
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answer #4
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answered by barile 4
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Male bettas have long fins. Females have shorter fins. Also, males may have brighter colors.
2007-03-06 12:54:23
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answer #5
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answered by Kiel_Raider_07 1
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The fins on the male are quite a bit larger than on the female, and the female will show changing stripes on her side's (depending on her stress leval) that the male doesn't have.
2007-03-06 00:11:48
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Males are colorful and females are plain. Usually only males are sold in a store. You can check for sure by putting a mirror up to the tank. A male who sees himself will puff out his gills and attack his reflection while females will ignore it. This is actually recommended from time to time to give him some exercise.
2007-03-06 00:02:03
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answer #7
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answered by David S 2
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www.bettatalk.com
check that out and look for it
normally males have longer fins and will flare and normally are bigger and will blow bubbles
females can also flare
but normally wont
they are smaller then the male and will have a white dot under her anal fin
-Ivan
2007-03-06 01:42:03
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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the male will have a more beautiful and ravishing looking tail...
2007-03-06 00:01:02
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answer #9
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answered by I need a vacation! 4
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The males are the bright colored ones
2007-03-06 01:34:32
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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