![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
*disclaimer: I have very little experience with bettas short of keeping
a male one in a fish bowl. I also have no intentions on trying this, so don't get all worked up. I'm just wondering.* My previous post was asking about female bettas, and I've been sitting here at work with nothing to do except think about how great bettas are and how I wish I could fill a tank full of them. Then I started to wonder.... Why CANT we do that? It's not like bettas are the only territorial fish we have in the hobby... why can't the same techniques used for keeping agressive cichlids together be used with bettas? Wouldn't it be possible to keep male and female bettas together in an overstocked, highly planted/caved tank? Wouldn't the agression be spread out and maybe, just maybe things would be ok? The only reasons I can think of for this approach not working (and these are just me basically saying random things that may or may not be way off) a -Maybe bettas are more delicate than cichlids? I suppose that generally they're not as big and tough looking, but then it's still a level playing field. It seems to me pretty unlikely that they could do a lot of damage to another fish if they couldn't take quite a bit of damage too. -Maybe it's the fins. Maybe the long fins get nipped up too easily and infections would abound. This seems a lot more likely to me than the first point. Still, if the water quality is good then there shouldn't be too much trouble for the fins to heal. -Maybe they're too messy to overstock a tank with? This seems pretty unlikely to me... if that were true then I don't think people would very much like them being in small tanks. -Maybe they're not very smart and would refuse to run off and heal up after a fight? Again, this seems like one of the more likely reasons to me. So does anyone have any thoughts on this? I know bettas are a lot of peoples favorite fish (I'm starting to feel that way myself) so I'm sure that somewhere, some time, SOMEONE tried something like this, but I don't know. It would be really cool if it worked, but I think it would be too much of a risk for a normal person to try. -m |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"m" wrote in message
oups.com... *disclaimer: I have very little experience with bettas short of keeping a male one in a fish bowl. I also have no intentions on trying this, so don't get all worked up. I'm just wondering.* My previous post was asking about female bettas, and I've been sitting here at work with nothing to do except think about how great bettas are and how I wish I could fill a tank full of them. Then I started to wonder.... Why CANT we do that? It's not like bettas are the only territorial fish we have in the hobby... why can't the same techniques used for keeping agressive cichlids together be used with bettas? Wouldn't it be possible to keep male and female bettas together in an overstocked, highly planted/caved tank? Wouldn't the agression be spread out and maybe, just maybe things would be ok? The only reasons I can think of for this approach not working (and these are just me basically saying random things that may or may not be way off) a -Maybe bettas are more delicate than cichlids? I suppose that generally they're not as big and tough looking, but then it's still a level playing field. It seems to me pretty unlikely that they could do a lot of damage to another fish if they couldn't take quite a bit of damage too. -Maybe it's the fins. Maybe the long fins get nipped up too easily and infections would abound. This seems a lot more likely to me than the first point. Still, if the water quality is good then there shouldn't be too much trouble for the fins to heal. -Maybe they're too messy to overstock a tank with? This seems pretty unlikely to me... if that were true then I don't think people would very much like them being in small tanks. -Maybe they're not very smart and would refuse to run off and heal up after a fight? Again, this seems like one of the more likely reasons to me. So does anyone have any thoughts on this? I know bettas are a lot of peoples favorite fish (I'm starting to feel that way myself) so I'm sure that somewhere, some time, SOMEONE tried something like this, but I don't know. It would be really cool if it worked, but I think it would be too much of a risk for a normal person to try. -m The question is whether multiple males can be kept in a single tank. I don't have any experience with this, but I imagine that if it could be made to work (which I doubt), then you would have a lot of males with torn fins. This would probably not cause any health issues (with healthy fish in clean water) but it would be very unattractive to look at. Territorial cichlids which are able to do serious damage tend to have sorter fins and I think more hard rays. The nature of their contest is often through pushing and pulling with the jaws, and various amounts of posturing, with the occasional feints. It's only when the loser does not disappear from the winner's sight that he is in danger of being killed (or he would have been able to swim away to fight another day). There are some cichlids such as the Leleopis which can genuinely kill a rival with a single plunge, but most depend mostly on guile and jaw-wrestling. I think Bettas also do a lot of posturing, flaring and circling, but then they try to take chunks of each others fins out, so winner or loser, both look like hell. -- www.NetMax.tk |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
yeah probably lots of torn fins - I had a tank of 5 females and one
male - turns out on of the females was a short fin variety male! Anyway, the blue long fin male certainly got ripped up. You'd have a tank full of ugly diseased fish. With regards to simply having a lot of caves and plants - I had lots of plants and caves - the fact of the matter is, with mine, the girls were too stupid to hide half the time and suffered with the male chasing them! The male used to hide sometimes, but the female that turned out to be male, always found him... |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]() m wrote: *disclaimer: I have very little experience with bettas short of keeping a male one in a fish bowl. I also have no intentions on trying this, so don't get all worked up. I'm just wondering.* My previous post was asking about female bettas, and I've been sitting here at work with nothing to do except think about how great bettas are and how I wish I could fill a tank full of them. Then I started to wonder.... Why CANT we do that? It's not like bettas are the only territorial fish we have in the hobby... why can't the same techniques used for keeping agressive cichlids together be used with bettas? Wouldn't it be possible to keep male and female bettas together in an overstocked, highly planted/caved tank? Wouldn't the agression be spread out and maybe, just maybe things would be ok? The only reasons I can think of for this approach not working (and these are just me basically saying random things that may or may not be way off) a -Maybe bettas are more delicate than cichlids? I suppose that generally they're not as big and tough looking, but then it's still a level playing field. It seems to me pretty unlikely that they could do a lot of damage to another fish if they couldn't take quite a bit of damage too. -Maybe it's the fins. Maybe the long fins get nipped up too easily and infections would abound. This seems a lot more likely to me than the first point. Still, if the water quality is good then there shouldn't be too much trouble for the fins to heal. -Maybe they're too messy to overstock a tank with? This seems pretty unlikely to me... if that were true then I don't think people would very much like them being in small tanks. -Maybe they're not very smart and would refuse to run off and heal up after a fight? Again, this seems like one of the more likely reasons to me. So does anyone have any thoughts on this? I know bettas are a lot of peoples favorite fish (I'm starting to feel that way myself) so I'm sure that somewhere, some time, SOMEONE tried something like this, but I don't know. It would be really cool if it worked, but I think it would be too much of a risk for a normal person to try. -m There's an old tale I heard many, many years ago, and then again when Faith, from BETTATALK was on Animal Planet, that an experiment took place in a large pond...big, not like a backyard one, but 2 males were placed in it and they wouldn't leave each other alone, even though they had the entire pond to themselves. There have been times when males could be kept together, however, it's extremely rare and very strict conditions must kept. They have to be submissive (that right there is a rarity). They have to be this way from hatching, and growing, and when after the age of separating has past and the males in question are still not fighting..then if you actually have siblings that are like this, they must never, ever be separated. If they are to be moved...it must be done together. If they are apart, it's been said that all bets are off and they will battle. The billion to one shot is the males that are not sibs, both overly submissive that they do not spar. In 30 yrs, I've had this happen once (by accident) and it only lasted a few months. I had a male in a 29g, and one floating in a "bettahex" until I had set up it's own tank. He jumped out, after dumping the lid off the little hex! I found them on either end of the tank..no split fins. I parked my butt down in front of the tank and just watched them. The only time they did anything was at feeding time or trying to get my attention. However, that was nothing more than posturing. They were like this for 3 months until I woke up one day with them both in shreds. This is something I (Betta keeper for 30 yrs and breeder for 19 of them) won't ever do again...even if I have sibs that are not fighting, I don't keep them together. I fully believe that no matter how friendly they get along, it's only a matter of time before they get into it. Having talked to several other breeders that have had sibs together have also learned that it only lasts for so long and then one day they go at it. It seems that no matter the territory size in a closed system (tank), it's not enough. In the wild they don't fight to the death, the loser simply swims off. Being a closed system, they have no where to go. This is the problem. The loser cannot flee the other's territory and gets constantly harrassed to the point of death from the stress,or infections in their wounds. Rarely ever does one kill another outright. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]() m wrote: *disclaimer: I have very little experience with bettas short of keeping a male one in a fish bowl. I also have no intentions on trying this, so don't get all worked up. I'm just wondering.* My previous post was asking about female bettas, and I've been sitting here at work with nothing to do except think about how great bettas are and how I wish I could fill a tank full of them. Then I started to wonder.... Why CANT we do that? It's not like bettas are the only territorial fish we have in the hobby... why can't the same techniques used for keeping agressive cichlids together be used with bettas? Wouldn't it be possible to keep male and female bettas together in an overstocked, highly planted/caved tank? Wouldn't the agression be spread out and maybe, just maybe things would be ok? The only reasons I can think of for this approach not working (and these are just me basically saying random things that may or may not be way off) a -Maybe bettas are more delicate than cichlids? I suppose that generally they're not as big and tough looking, but then it's still a level playing field. It seems to me pretty unlikely that they could do a lot of damage to another fish if they couldn't take quite a bit of damage too. -Maybe it's the fins. Maybe the long fins get nipped up too easily and infections would abound. This seems a lot more likely to me than the first point. Still, if the water quality is good then there shouldn't be too much trouble for the fins to heal. -Maybe they're too messy to overstock a tank with? This seems pretty unlikely to me... if that were true then I don't think people would very much like them being in small tanks. -Maybe they're not very smart and would refuse to run off and heal up after a fight? Again, this seems like one of the more likely reasons to me. So does anyone have any thoughts on this? I know bettas are a lot of peoples favorite fish (I'm starting to feel that way myself) so I'm sure that somewhere, some time, SOMEONE tried something like this, but I don't know. It would be really cool if it worked, but I think it would be too much of a risk for a normal person to try. -m There's an old tale I heard many, many years ago, and then again when Faith, from BETTATALK was on Animal Planet, that an experiment took place in a large pond...big, not like a backyard one, but 2 males were placed in it and they wouldn't leave each other alone, even though they had the entire pond to themselves. There have been times when males could be kept together, however, it's extremely rare and very strict conditions must kept. They have to be submissive (that right there is a rarity). They have to be this way from hatching, and growing, and when after the age of separating has past and the males in question are still not fighting..then if you actually have siblings that are like this, they must never, ever be separated. If they are to be moved...it must be done together. If they are apart, it's been said that all bets are off and they will battle. The billion to one shot is the males that are not sibs, both overly submissive that they do not spar. In 30 yrs, I've had this happen once (by accident) and it only lasted a few months. I had a male in a 29g, and one floating in a "bettahex" until I had set up it's own tank. He jumped out, after dumping the lid off the little hex! I found them on either end of the tank..no split fins. I parked my butt down in front of the tank and just watched them. The only time they did anything was at feeding time or trying to get my attention. However, that was nothing more than posturing. They were like this for 3 months until I woke up one day with them both in shreds. This is something I (Betta keeper for 30 yrs and breeder for 19 of them) won't ever do again...even if I have sibs that are not fighting, I don't keep them together. I fully believe that no matter how friendly they get along, it's only a matter of time before they get into it. Having talked to several other breeders that have had sibs together have also learned that it only lasts for so long and then one day they go at it. It seems that no matter the territory size in a closed system (tank), it's not enough. In the wild they don't fight to the death, the loser simply swims off. Being a closed system, they have no where to go. This is the problem. The loser cannot flee the other's territory and gets constantly harrassed to the point of death from the stress,or infections in their wounds. Rarely ever does one kill another outright. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]() the girls were too stupid to hide half the time Hey, these are female Bettas we're talking about... they were too PROUD to hide. ;-) |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]() IDzine01 wrote: the girls were too stupid to hide half the time Hey, these are female Bettas we're talking about... they were too PROUD to hide. ;-) Hehe, that's for sure. Females don't tend hide all the time. They are out and about, covering the entire tank, no matter how large it is (same with males). New females may tend to hide, but as they get more comfortable with their surroundings, color back up (most when new will show submission coloring (blanched out color with horizontal barring), but quickly color up. If you have several females and some simply don't color back up when settled in and are in good health, nothing to worry about as they're showing the ladies above them that they're no threat to their place in the hierarchy. It's also easy to learn their "language" (body language). Just what them and how they interact with each other. Who is doing posturing to whom, and who always never backs down (that would be the alpha), all the way down to the omega, the lowest on the totum pole who may get chased, but shouldn't show damage. I like to keep a close eye on that one, and make sure she's not overly stressed out. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
betta gone bad? | John D. Goulden | General | 14 | March 5th 05 06:07 PM |
Ghost shrimp and Betta | robin | General | 3 | February 18th 05 04:00 PM |
My Red Fish is Sick - I Think He is Dying! | jstass | General | 7 | May 17th 04 01:26 AM |
A betta and a 2 gallon bowl | Gregory_Asr | General | 7 | October 23rd 03 04:37 PM |