They would probably be just fine so long you have plenty of water, room, and ornaments. I would also feed twice a day!
The puffer loves live food and will eat anything smaller than it is, it is one of the few freshwater fish that has teeth.
Peaceful fish, who aren't large enough to eat the betta. Many quicker fish like to chew on their long fins. Medium-small schooling fish (tetras, platys, mollies, non-fancy guppies) and bottom dwelling fish/frogs/snails are safe.
yes
Usually, yes.
yes
The only difference is the tail is about 1 cm bigger Males usually aready have fancy tails i find
you can't force them to breed but you can put 2-3 females with 1 male in a separate tank and eventually you will get fry(babies). In my tank i have mollie fry and previously had platy fry whish has now grown up and are adults
yes the guppies might eat her fin because they it looks like food .
The guppy is named after the Rev. J.L. Guppy of Trinidad, an early collector of the species from the late 1800's. Guppies (Poecilia reticulata) are placed in the family as mollies and mosquitofish. The wild, original guppy is native to Central America, as well as Trinidad and northern South America. Today, many guppies are found in Asia, especially Singapore, where many fancy strains are bred in large fish farms, and shipped to pet stores all over the world. The Fancy Guppy Fancy guppies are the result of specialized breeding techniques and they only slightly resemble the small, wild guppy, often seen in pet stores labeled "feeder fish". Guppies are freshwater fish. Their tanks should contain no salt. http://www.TheExoticFish.com
fish tank
No,but guppies(livebearer types) can live with small sharks like dwarf shark e.g.
The answer depends on the number of guppies. A few guppies can live in a 2.5 gallon tank or larger, temperature between 72 and 80 degrees Fahrenheit. Many people raise fancy guppies in 5.5 and 10 gallon tanks.