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Don't worry, you'll find that special someone. I believe in you!
Well, I'm not actually old enough to be married yet...but when I am, I'm sure I'll find someone.
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Don't worry, you'll find that special someone. I believe in you!
My bad. I'm just playing around. This seems like a fun jokey thread. Glad you took it that way.
Housing more than 1 male betta together isn't an unpopular opinion IMO. It's housing 2 male betta splendens together that would be an "unpopular opinion" but that's actually just a fact hahaA majority of the species, actually. If you have a spacious aquarium along with plants and/or hardscapes, then you can house males together. I hear a lot of people prefer to keep two males and one female Betta channoides as well as Betta albimarginata in the same aquarium.
This is a 'newbie' question, but seeing your response & skimming through what others mentioned about homing more than 1 male betta together - is it possible you could have more than 1 male betta in a tank?Housing more than 1 male betta together isn't an unpopular opinion IMO. It's housing 2 male betta splendens together that would be an "unpopular opinion" but that's actually just a fact haha
It's possible, briefly, before one kills the other.This is a 'newbie' question, but seeing your response & skimming through what others mentioned about homing more than 1 male betta together - is it possible you could have more than 1 male betta in a tank?
I find myself falling in love with betta fish and always want to rescue them all from pet store shelves! But, I know I can't continue having a bunch of random aquariums all over the house. Even with a divider, I thought it'd be cruel to keep them together as they would constantly feel stressed and never feel like they'd have their own territory.
But, if you're telling me otherwise
No.This is a 'newbie' question, but seeing your response & skimming through what others mentioned about homing more than 1 male betta together - is it possible you could have more than 1 male betta in a tank?
I find myself falling in love with betta fish and always want to rescue them all from pet store shelves! But, I know I can't continue having a bunch of random aquariums all over the house. Even with a divider, I thought it'd be cruel to keep them together as they would constantly feel stressed and never feel like they'd have their own territory.
But, if you're telling me otherwise
It's possible, briefly, before one kills the other.
No.
But some people have success with a group of female bettas in a larger tank. And the females are equally cute!
I don't either! My reason is they start out nice but either they start browning and die, or they are crazy healthy and spore everywhere so they turn out looking like cousin IT put his finger in an electric socket (complete with black burned hair sticking out everywhere!)here's another one from me:
I don't like Java ferns
2 or 3 would be just fine.Ah, I see. Well, that stinks. I wouldn't want to risk them killing each other.
I've heard my mom talk about 'sororities' - a group of female bettas. I wish they had flippy, pretty tails - the way males do.
Do you all think that female bettas need to be in a group, or would they work well with just the two or three of them?
Thanks for the response! Have you kept 2 or 3 together before? What was their behavior like?2 or 3 would be just fine.
No, I have not, scratch what I said, and read Essjay's post above....I've only kept singular males, sometimes in communities with other fishThanks for the response! Have you kept 2 or 3 together before? What was their behavior like?
Thank you so much for this information! Very helpful! I'm hoping in the future I can get a big tank just for a female betta sorority/community.It is usually recommended that 4 is the minimum.
1 is OK
2 - one will pick on the other
3 - two will gang up on one
4 - there are enough subordinate females that none gets picked on all the time
5+ - even better than 4.
The tank must be big enough and filled with plants, real or fake, to break up line of sight. The females must all be added at the same time. Expect fighting as they establish a pecking order.
A sorority must be monitored to catch any nasty behaviour before any of the fish are harmed. Some females are very aggressive and cannot live with other females.