FoxChase
Fish Fanatic
Wondering which tends to be hardier, has the longer lifespan and which is tends to be more aggressive toward tank mates.
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Wondering which tends to be hardier, has the longer lifespan and which is tends to be more aggressive toward tank mates.
What are F1 and F2?F1 or F2 fish are also hardy. Unlike their wild fish, they tend to adapt much better and will take dry foods much easier.
Have you ever had a betta imported? Found a site with some fish I really like, but feel hesitant to buy a fish from so far away (Thailand), it sounds very complicated.In reference to betta species I find the "wild" betta to live much longer the fancy tailed betta splendins in shops have a life span of "3-5 years" but most will never live that long. I find they are so prone to fin rot, tumour, swimming problems such as swim bladder issues and more than most won't live past 2 years. They are often so over breed they have issues and teh long-finned ones will have swimming problems as they age. Compared to the wild betta species which from my own research tend to live longer closer to 5 years or more for some species, though they are not all the same and different wild bettas will live longer or shorter. As an example in a few days, I'm getting my Betta mahachai and their life span is between 5-7 years.
As far as temperament often many wild betta species are far calmer and easier to cohabit with other fish
All of that still doesn't guarantee that your Cardinal Tetras came from the wild tank or the domestic tank, it just proves they want to sell you some fish.You pays the money and you take your chances....and just hope the fish is healthy and survives
As with everything ordered unseen, the onus is on trust.
When I started ordering livestock online, I was naive and allowed myself to believe that the glossy website and write-up on fish sold was 100% truthful and trustworthy
It wasn't.
I received dead and dying fish, sold far too young for sale let alone transit
So after giving that supplier an earful, I found another one and I contacted them....
Please send photos with date stamp of your breeding facility
Please send copies of your import licence
Please send copies of your local authority licence to sell livestock
Please send date stamped photos or video of your packing process
The firm did exactly that without hesitation and noted that it was refreshing to hear from a genuinely concerned fishkeeper who wanted to know and have proof of humane practice and legal right to import, breed and sell livestock
Any firms that refused or hesitated to provide that, they were ignored by me.
If thinking of buying from abroad, I would add that I wanted date stamped photo proof of humane breeding, storage aquariums and packing for export plus copies of their export licence.
I have had fish imported from Thailand several times and have gotten lucky every time . I have gone through Aquabids and Ebay , most recently from a breeder on Ebay. One thing you have to know when importing , you must go through a transhipper. I use Linda Olson , she is awesome to work with , she has stellar communication and her packaging is second to none. Just beware that you may only pay 10 dollars for a fish but shipping is very expensive , because it's next day air.Have you ever had a betta imported? Found a site with some fish I really like, but feel hesitant to buy a fish from so far away (Thailand), it sounds very complicated.