Wondering if anyone would agree that the fins looks like this from being nipped at by other gouramis??? I believe this is a male (correct me if im wrong) and there are 3 females in the tank. Would that be normal behavior?
Arent the feWhich are male or female do you think. The dwarf and the pearl gourami do most of the picking. The flame dwarf is pretty shy
Thanks for the reply i was under the impression that atleast 2 were female (pearl) and (dwarf not being picked on) being the shape of their fins body size etc.. Is a 75 gallon tank enough space for them? thats what they are in along with 3 angel fish 4 barbs and 4 cory. (All get along well) Also the gourami being picked on isnt hiding or anything and still eating and acting normal. Think they will ever “work it out” and be peaceful with each other?All three dwarf gouramis are male.
The orange one is a male of the flame or sunset variety. Females of this variety are plain silver.
The two blue and red striped fish are also males, they are too brightly coloured for females. Sometimes the females have a hint of stripes but are also usually plain silver.
The pearl gourami is either a female or an immature male. Mature males have fringes on the edges of their fins.
It is not advisable to mix gourami species in the same tank.
Dwarf gouramis are at the more aggressive end of the gourami behaviour spectrum. Unless the tank is very large, there should be no more than one male in a tank - and you have three.
The male in post#6 is being bullied. The only way to save him is to move him to another tank with no other gouramis. Or possibly rehome all three of the gouramis in post #5 and keep the bullied one and hope he recovers.
If the bullied one does die from being picked on, it's likely that one of the three will start picking on one of the others
Yea it has plenty of places to “hide and divide” rocks plants etc. have had the pearl gourami for about 3 weeks now. Think it is femals. Thank you for the feedbackAll three dwarf gouramis are male.
The orange one is a male of the flame or sunset variety. Females of this variety are plain silver.
The two blue and red striped fish are also males, they are too brightly coloured for females. Sometimes the females have a hint of stripes but are also usually plain silver.
The pearl gourami is either a female or an immature male. Mature males have fringes on the edges of their fins.
It is not advisable to mix gourami species in the same tank.
Dwarf gouramis are at the more aggressive end of the gourami behaviour spectrum. Unless the tank is very large, there should be no more than one male in a tank - and you have three.
The male in post#6 is being bullied. The only way to save him is to move him to another tank with no other gouramis. Or possibly rehome all three of the gouramis in post #5 and keep the bullied one and hope he recovers.
If the bullied one does die from being picked on, it's likely that one of the three will start picking on one of the others.