I have had my betta with lots of fish before. I started him out in a five gallon with some neon tetras. The tetras outran him easily and he gave up chasing them after a day. I moved him into bigger tanks and with different types of fish. Now he is in a 30 gallon community with lots of fish and he is fine. Definitely go with some tetras in a smaller tank and maybe some mollies in a 10 gallon. Good Luck!
2007-03-13 20:54:48
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answer #1
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answered by Andrew 2
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I am relatively new at this - I can tell you my experience though!
I have a betta in a 3 gal WaterHome tank, with 3 african dwarf frogs and a snail, they seem to be coexisting quite well.
However, I end up with a lot of algae and mess, and need to clean the tank often. I know I will need to upgrade to a larger tank for them all.
My overall point is that they seem to all be getting along quite well. The Betta ignores the frogs and vice/versa, but they seem to enjoy similar foods (bloodworms, pellets, etc.). The snail does his own thing.
The frogs are really cute to watch at night, when they get active. They do like to have hiding places tho.
As far as other fish go - I've heard that as long as you don't put 2 male Bettas together, you're ok.... other small, non-confrontational, freshwater fish might do ok?
hope that helps!
2007-03-13 18:34:58
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Choose something without long fins or betta-like colors (deep red, blue, and purple tones). They will only attack fish that they think are other male bettas. Definitely avoid gourami, they are related to bettas and will not get along. Also avoid angelfish.
5 gallons is too small for more than the betta, however. If you want him to have friends you need to get a 10 gallon tank, minimum. Overcrowding will encourage aggressive behavior and you'll lose your fish anyway.
2007-03-13 16:26:36
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answer #3
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answered by Dreamer 7
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I have a male Betta too and I have 2 fancy guppies (male), 2 neon tetras, 1 albino catfish, 2 dwarf African frogs, and one snail.
The Betta seems to be attracted to bright colored tails. He doesn't attack or harm the other fish, but he is kind of territorial.
Just get community type fish, some that are not aggressive.
2007-03-13 16:22:21
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answer #4
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answered by Ella 7
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save some issues in concepts. A clear out provides you aeration, and enables convert poisonous ammonia, and nitrites into much less poisonous nitrates. A betta is incredibly difficult, yet ammonia, and nitrites can nonetheless strengthen and kill him. So a clear out isn't needed, in spite of the indisputable fact that it is going to help him lead an prolonged fuller existence. (My men in 5 gallon filtered tanks have a tendency to stay over 3 years.) so a procedures as catfish they choose the aeration as they lack the betta's lung like organ. Plus cory catfish are not very tolerent of ammonia, and nitrites. deliver it to concepts there is food on the backside of this type of small container you're over feeding a betta. A betta will luckily consume himself to death, and an extremely hungry betta will consume off the backside. food = ammonia in spite of if it rather is eaten or no longer. additionally bettas are territorial, and in small packing containers get relatively aggressive. In a three-5 gallon tank maximum betta may well be pleased with a cory catfish. of direction this varies betta to betta. i've got have been given a betta named "Snail Slayer".
2016-10-02 02:12:12
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answer #5
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answered by ? 4
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A male betta will not kill other fish and especially not 8" long fish. That's absolutely rediculous. Bettas are quite peaceful except with other bettas. A pair of guppies would be fine, or 4-5 neons or glowlights. A pair of small cory cats would be great too. As long as you use small, peaceful fish you'll be fine.
MM
2007-03-13 16:21:02
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answer #6
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answered by magicman116 7
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Do not put any other fish with your betta. Your male betta fish will not kill them, it will die instead, not from physical damage, but from stress. Betta fish get extremely stressed when they see any other fish. Keep them seperate make sure they dont see any other fish.
2007-03-13 16:25:23
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Your betta may or may not let his tank mates live. Buy a pair of feeder guppies and see how he reatcs to them. Out of my 9 bettas only my large female killed the guppies, the rest ignored them or chased them once in awhile. Each betta is different and will react differently.
2007-03-13 16:28:00
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answer #8
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answered by Palor 4
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Bettas don't want roomates.
They chase, bother, nip and otherwise harrass all other fish until they die.
Get plastic or glass ones instead. They are pretty and bettas are really funny about pushing them around and playing with them.
They are available at petstores. Glass ones hang from a floating glass ball by fishing line. Plastic ones are mass produced and are widely available.
2007-03-13 16:23:31
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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the betta would probably kill the other fish or hurt them badly. i have a male betta for 3 years so far and he almost killed my other fish and he killed some snails so the betta would probably kill the small fish(es).
2007-03-13 16:22:33
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answer #10
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answered by muffin-tin 2
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