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bettas in plastic cups - bettas.jpg (0/1)
because they can, is the short answer. they breathe air so they can
survive for much longer than other tropical fish under these bad conditions... also the males dont mix with other males, in better fish stores they keep the females together in a tank. so its not whats best for them, but unfortunetly theres a trend of keeping these fish in small cups and fish bowls. but when put in larger tanks even with other fish, there happier with swimming space. mines in a 120 and absolutely loves it. so in conclusion bettas raised in these cups will die very young and in my opinion not have a very comfortable life. its a shame such a curious fish is often given so little to work with. On Wed, 23 Nov 2005 18:40:12 -0500, Steve wrote: With all the betta discussion lately, can someone tell me about bettas in plastic cups? Why are they offered for sale this way? The losses must be great and the fish don't look attractive for purchase. Also, when do the fish go into the plastic cups? Is it for transport, or are they raised in there? Thanks for any information. Steve Posted Via Usenet.com Premium Usenet Newsgroup Services ---------------------------------------------------------- ** SPEED ** RETENTION ** COMPLETION ** ANONYMITY ** ---------------------------------------------------------- http://www.usenet.com |
bettas in plastic cups
i keep mine in a 120 with tiger barbs and a few other aggressive fish.
the key is to grow plants to the top so they always have safe spots and can swim unnoticed. occasionally when exploring you may see your betta rush back to his plants. until the plants grow in you may hang a large ordiment from the top, which also gives your betta good protection in community tanks. On Wed, 23 Nov 2005 20:15:11 -0500, Steve wrote: Might a male betta make a wise addition to my planted 90 gallon aquarium? I suspect not, because it has two male blue gourami (possible fighting?) and some fast swimmers such as zebra danios, dwarf neon rainbowfish and one large "miscellaneous" rainbowfish that came in with the dwarfs. Steve Posted Via Usenet.com Premium Usenet Newsgroup Services ---------------------------------------------------------- ** SPEED ** RETENTION ** COMPLETION ** ANONYMITY ** ---------------------------------------------------------- http://www.usenet.com |
bettas in plastic cups
With all the betta discussion lately, can someone tell me about bettas
in plastic cups? Why are they offered for sale this way? The losses must be great and the fish don't look attractive for purchase. Also, when do the fish go into the plastic cups? Is it for transport, or are they raised in there? Thanks for any information. Steve |
bettas in plastic cups
Steve wrote:
With all the betta discussion lately, can someone tell me about bettas in plastic cups? Why are they offered for sale this way? The losses must be great and the fish don't look attractive for purchase. Also, when do the fish go into the plastic cups? Is it for transport, or are they raised in there? Thanks for any information. Steve IMO if you are buying any fish you need to provide them with adequate and suitable accomodation as you would any pet.....I would never keep a fish such as a betta in anything other than a heated, filtered 5 gall (UK) tank....it is not possible to buy anything smaller at the reputable places I shop....that being said I do understand that bettas can be kept successfully in smaller, filtered, heated tanks quite happily - although I would think that probably a 2 gall would be the minimum....anything less and without the adequate provisions for what is a tropical fish IMO is cruel on a long term basis - afterall they need room to swim. Now obviously when breeding bettas a 2 gall tank for each of the fry is impractical which is why I believe most reputable breeders would go for a heated room therefore ensuring that the fish are kept at the right temps and smaller containers with more frequent water changes - in most cases, other than the very committed hobbyiest breeding these fish is a business and it is in the breeders interest for the fish to survive...at least til they hit the shops... Now, I don't breed bettas, although I do have two males that both live in their 20L (5UK gall) tanks....I would never consider keeping them in a cup or small bowl...to me, it just doesn't seem right.... There is a trend, (horrible market), for selling bettas in vases...they are condemed to living in a small vase with a non-aquatic plant taking up most of the air space (so they had limited real air to breath). I believe the advice was that they would live on the plant roots - but bettas are carnivorous....the idea as far as I can see is that these fish were treated as ornaments rather than live animals....as expendable as a bunch of flowers....what you are describing very much smacks of this type of mentality...."look you can own a fish that can survive in a cup" - absolute rubbish - and by your question I can very much see that you are of the same opinion.... All of this is based on my research, what I have heard from other more experienced betta keepers, the contentment of my bettas in their 5 gall tanks and a gut feeling that it is just so, so very wrong to provide any living creature with cramped conditions where they just survive rather than have any quality of life....hey, ho JMO Gill |
bettas in plastic cups
"Steve" wrote in message . .. With all the betta discussion lately, can someone tell me about bettas in plastic cups? Why are they offered for sale this way? ## Because they can't mix bettas together in one bag as they do the other types of fish. It's the most economical way to ship them. There doesn't seem to be an laws or rules regarding the care and welfare of fish. There should be but there isn't from what I can see. The real abuse comes in when they reach the stores or pet-shops where they are not properly cared for or fed. They sit in their filthy water until it evaporates and they die, or the toxic waste in the small container kills them. Wal*Mart stores carry them in much larger containers but they're just as filthy and foul smelling. The female I bought a few weeks ago was literally in a cesspool of filth. The losses must be great and the fish don't look attractive for purchase. ## This is true in some chain-stores where the workers are either clueless or couldn't care less. About 10% of them were already dead in a store I visited yesterday. Some were already decomposed in their filthy containers. Talk about cruelty. Those in PetsMart were in pretty good shape but in very small cups. Also, when do the fish go into the plastic cups? Is it for transport, or are they raised in there? Thanks for any information. ## That would depend on what breeder they got them from. They must be separated at some point to keep the finnage from being marred so the breeders have to house them in something. I'm sure the big breeders have some type of flow-through systems now. No one is changing the water in thousands of small containers or jars. Those I saw years ago utilized all types of glass containers. Most held no more than 2 cups of water. They were "bagged" the day they were taken to the stores. The stores in that area put them in those small ivy bowls that hold about 8 oz of water. If the betta was lucky his new owner put him in something larger. Unfortunately I saw people buy the same tiny ivy bowls to keep them in - no gravel, no plants. I always felt the fish was going to his death. But I've had people tell me they had bettas live several years in such small bowls. Now I believe most bettas are imported. So they're probably in those small cups for a few days by the time they reach the pet stores. One store here puts the bettas in a filtered betta tank that has partitions and a flow-through filter system of some kind. I stopped breeding them back in the late 60s because there wasn't enough of a market, nor did I get enough per fish to make it worth while, plus I had a full time job - so I gave it up. I enjoyed it while I did it though. :-) -- Koi-Lo.... frugal ponding since 1995... My Pond & Aquarium Pages: http://bellsouthpwp.net/s/h/shastadaisy ~~~ }((((o ~~~ }{{{{o ~~~ }(((((o |
bettas in plastic cups
Gill Passman wrote:
Steve wrote: With all the betta discussion lately, can someone tell me about bettas in plastic cups? Why are they offered for sale this way? The losses must be great and the fish don't look attractive for purchase. Also, when do the fish go into the plastic cups? Is it for transport, or are they raised in there? Thanks for any information. Steve IMO if you are buying any fish you need to provide them with adequate and suitable accomodation as you would any pet.....I would never keep a fish such as a betta in anything other than a heated, filtered 5 gall (UK) tank....it is not possible to buy anything smaller at the reputable places I shop....that being said I do understand that bettas can be kept successfully in smaller, filtered, heated tanks quite happily - although I would think that probably a 2 gall would be the minimum....anything less and without the adequate provisions for what is a tropical fish IMO is cruel on a long term basis - afterall they need room to swim. Now obviously when breeding bettas a 2 gall tank for each of the fry is impractical which is why I believe most reputable breeders would go for a heated room therefore ensuring that the fish are kept at the right temps and smaller containers with more frequent water changes - in most cases, other than the very committed hobbyiest breeding these fish is a business and it is in the breeders interest for the fish to survive...at least til they hit the shops... Now, I don't breed bettas, although I do have two males that both live in their 20L (5UK gall) tanks....I would never consider keeping them in a cup or small bowl...to me, it just doesn't seem right.... There is a trend, (horrible market), for selling bettas in vases...they are condemed to living in a small vase with a non-aquatic plant taking up most of the air space (so they had limited real air to breath). I believe the advice was that they would live on the plant roots - but bettas are carnivorous....the idea as far as I can see is that these fish were treated as ornaments rather than live animals....as expendable as a bunch of flowers....what you are describing very much smacks of this type of mentality...."look you can own a fish that can survive in a cup" - absolute rubbish - and by your question I can very much see that you are of the same opinion.... All of this is based on my research, what I have heard from other more experienced betta keepers, the contentment of my bettas in their 5 gall tanks and a gut feeling that it is just so, so very wrong to provide any living creature with cramped conditions where they just survive rather than have any quality of life....hey, ho JMO Gill Gill, Thanks for sharing your betta experiences. I've had 3 male bettas in long history of keeping aquariums, and two lasted less than a year for me. The last one lasted perhaps 1.5 year, and it was in a planted, heated, unfiltered 2 gallon plastic aquarium. Stores housing/ selling bettas in plastic cups is a trend here in Canada; its virtually impossible to find bettas in large aquariums in the stores. All the betta discussion ;) here lately prompted my question. I'm really quite curious about the reasons behind plastic cup bettas, although I think the fish stores expect customers to move their bettas to something larger than a cup once they get home. Steve |
bettas in plastic cups
Koi-lo wrote:
"Steve" wrote in message . .. With all the betta discussion lately, can someone tell me about bettas in plastic cups? Why are they offered for sale this way? ## Because they can't mix bettas together in one bag as they do the other types of fish. It's the most economical way to ship them. There doesn't seem to be an laws or rules regarding the care and welfare of fish. There should be but there isn't from what I can see. The real abuse comes in when they reach the stores or pet-shops where they are not properly cared for or fed. They sit in their filthy water until it evaporates and they die, or the toxic waste in the small container kills them. Wal*Mart stores carry them in much larger containers but they're just as filthy and foul smelling. The female I bought a few weeks ago was literally in a cesspool of filth. The losses must be great and the fish don't look attractive for purchase. ## This is true in some chain-stores where the workers are either clueless or couldn't care less. About 10% of them were already dead in a store I visited yesterday. Some were already decomposed in their filthy containers. Talk about cruelty. Those in PetsMart were in pretty good shape but in very small cups. Also, when do the fish go into the plastic cups? Is it for transport, or are they raised in there? Thanks for any information. ## That would depend on what breeder they got them from. They must be separated at some point to keep the finnage from being marred so the breeders have to house them in something. I'm sure the big breeders have some type of flow-through systems now. No one is changing the water in thousands of small containers or jars. Those I saw years ago utilized all types of glass containers. Most held no more than 2 cups of water. They were "bagged" the day they were taken to the stores. The stores in that area put them in those small ivy bowls that hold about 8 oz of water. If the betta was lucky his new owner put him in something larger. Unfortunately I saw people buy the same tiny ivy bowls to keep them in - no gravel, no plants. I always felt the fish was going to his death. But I've had people tell me they had bettas live several years in such small bowls. Now I believe most bettas are imported. So they're probably in those small cups for a few days by the time they reach the pet stores. One store here puts the bettas in a filtered betta tank that has partitions and a flow-through filter system of some kind. I stopped breeding them back in the late 60s because there wasn't enough of a market, nor did I get enough per fish to make it worth while, plus I had a full time job - so I gave it up. I enjoyed it while I did it though. :-) Thanks, that's informative. As mentioned to another poster, I haven't had great success with bettas. The single male bettas I kept in approx 15 gal community aquariums with other small fish each lasted about 9mo to 1 year. The one I recently kept by itself in a heated, planted, unfiltered 2 gallon aquarium lasted about 1.5 years. This raises a couple of questions: Are bettas relatively old when shipped, and expected to live only another year? Are bettas healthier and happier when kept by themselves? Might a male betta make a wise addition to my planted 90 gallon aquarium? I suspect not, because it has two male blue gourami (possible fighting?) and some fast swimmers such as zebra danios, dwarf neon rainbowfish and one large "miscellaneous" rainbowfish that came in with the dwarfs. Steve |
bettas in plastic cups
dddd wrote:
i keep mine in a 120 with tiger barbs and a few other aggressive fish. the key is to grow plants to the top so they always have safe spots and can swim unnoticed. occasionally when exploring you may see your betta rush back to his plants. until the plants grow in you may hang a large ordiment from the top, which also gives your betta good protection in community tanks. Thanks. My giant Val grow all over the tank surface, so maybe I'll try a betta and see how it goes. The only problem is, I have nowhere suitable to put the betta if it doesn't work out. The 2 gal aquarium is now a snail-raising tank and too stinky for fish :) . On Wed, 23 Nov 2005 20:15:11 -0500, Steve wrote: Might a male betta make a wise addition to my planted 90 gallon aquarium? I suspect not, because it has two male blue gourami (possible fighting?) and some fast swimmers such as zebra danios, dwarf neon rainbowfish and one large "miscellaneous" rainbowfish that came in with the dwarfs. Steve Posted Via Usenet.com Premium Usenet Newsgroup Services ---------------------------------------------------------- ** SPEED ** RETENTION ** COMPLETION ** ANONYMITY ** ---------------------------------------------------------- http://www.usenet.com |
bettas in plastic cups
"Steve" wrote in message
. .. With all the betta discussion lately, can someone tell me about bettas in plastic cups? Sure, I'll do my best. Why are they offered for sale this way? Space, visibility & time. Stores might sell 20 a week, and not have 20 different aquariums to be able to keep them singly. They showcase quickly for comparison when they are in the same area. A customer looking for a Betta can do a quick comparison in a few minutes, rather than going from tank to tank looking for them. The losses must be great and the fish don't look attractive for purchase. Overall, probably not worst. Their isolation provides a degree of protection from the diseases so common in the LFS. They are typically underfed, which could be worst as they are also typically inadequately maintained (water changes), and if fed regularly, would die in their own wastes. They are usually predominantly displayed, and cadavers don't make the store look good, so there is usually some effort to either discontinue the practice, or keep an eye on them. I was in the process of making a Betta shelf where I worked as I wanted to build a lit bookcase to hold them in slightly larger containers (square glass jars). Until then, we kept 95% of them on our counter in cups, but they were under the staff's continuous observations. What worked best was alternate cleaning and feeding. I had a weekly schedule for all the fish room maintenance, and every day, the Bettas were either fed or water changed. Seemed to work well, and we sold a lot of Bettas. We did have customers with Betta collections, and some would ask when our Betta delivery days were (to check out the best of the new arrivals). Also, when do the fish go into the plastic cups? They can be ordered in the cups, or without cups, or with cups seperate. For local purchases, transport in cups works fine (unless you already have too many cups). Our store would not sell them in a cup. They were moved into a bag with proper instructions. Occasionally, a customer might take the cup (travels well in a cup holder) but only for transportation purposes. Imports are transported in tiny individual bags, with about 3oz of water (enough to keep them wet, but not turn around). Incidentally, we started receiving other fish in this manner, particularly Rams and Discus. It looked terrible, but they seemed to travel very well, with very little losses. Travel cost is basically the weight of the water, so this kept shipping costs down. However, it would take an hour to process them on arrival like an assembly line. Using water from a plant tank, partially fill (but don't overfill) the plastic cup, open the envelope, pop the fish out, throw the envelope and old water away, snap the cover on, feed the fish (repeat 150 times). I once ordered 200 Bettas, but that took 3 weeks to sell, and I didn't want them in a cup longer than 2 weeks so I kept the orders smaller. We even marked the lids every time they were fed, like a prisoner in a cell, keeping time ;~), (so they wouldn't be in a cup too long). Any fish who was in a cup too long, went into an aquarium. Generally they would then color up and sell quickly, so this worked out. I'm a businessman who is a hobbyist (or perhaps a hobbyist who played being a businessman for a while ;~), so there was a balance to achieve. Is it for transport, or are they raised in there? Most Bettas come from Asia-Pac countries, China Singapore and Thailand where hatcheries are huge industrial operations. If you google, you might find photos. The ones I've seen have the fish being raised in jars (millions of jars, shelf after shelf, row after row) with an air line and a terbang tree leaf in each jar. The tanks are not heated (its already very hot there) or filtered (I believe the fish are rather unceremoniously moved around into progressively larger jars, as they make their way to the boxing stations, another *very* interesting process). Thanks for any information. cheers & thanks for asking -- www.NetMax.tk Steve |
bettas in plastic cups - bettas.jpg (0/1)
dddd wrote in message ... so in conclusion bettas raised in these cups will die very young and in my opinion not have a very comfortable life. its a shame such a curious fish is often given so little to work with. ================ Part of the problem is people who buy them are not encouraged to buy bigger bowls or small tanks for them. Many bettas are sold as children's pets. The parents will not spent more than absolutely necessary. They make a face when you tell them they need chlorine remover and how expensive is that? How can you get them to spend $40 or more for a tank, filter and heater? What about a reflector? That's another $10 or more...... try getting a part-time job in a pet shop or aquarium store and you'll see what I mean. When they buy cheap goldfish many of them insist on a bowl, even when you tell them the fish will soon suffocate and die. They don't seem to care. Some are just too poor to purchase a tank plus the trappings. They simply don't have the spare cash. -- Koi-Lo.... frugal ponding since 1995... My Pond & Aquarium Pages: http://bellsouthpwp.net/s/h/shastadaisy ~~~ }((((o ~~~ }{{{{o ~~~ }(((((o |
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