allow the female 12 to 24 hours to finish laying eggs and remove her from the tank. After this allow the male three to five days to keep putting the eggs/fry back into the bubble nest *until the fry are free swimming* After this, remove the male. The trick at this point is to feed thte little buggers. They will eat a commercially available food such as first bites, water with algea/microorganisms in it or water that you have let a piece of lettuce sit in. at this point baby bettas are very hard to see, so don't worry if you only see one or two, you could still easily have twenty or thirty in the tank. Given time they will grow and you will be able to leave females together, but you will have to separate out males into individual containers.
no
newborns should be feed baby brine shrimp :) and i suppose you feed them when ever you feed a regular betta
Feed it?
You should feed your betta 3-4 times a week.
If you don't feed your betta for a whole day, then it will get starved, and probably die.
They sell packaged betta food.
Feed him/her. With my male betta whenever he sees me coming into my room, he'll swim excididly so I feed him
Microworms
no you can't
Yes you can feed it to a Betta, but most of it it will not be digestable for a Betta. Bettas are insectivores and need a proper diet made from insects etc. That is why pet shops have special Betta food for sale.
They breast feed them for a little while until they are old enough for them to eat meat.
I feed my Betta two or three pieces in the morning and three in the evening. However, if you feed your Betta a bloodworm then feed him the bloodworm and nothing else for the rest of the day. But don't feed him bloodworms too often because he will start to refuse the other food you give him.
Brine shrimp.