You cant the male would kill the female unless you have already a female then the female would kill the male
because the male will try and get on the female
mating a male and female beta is simple,but you cannot just put a male and female together expecting them to mate.it depends on how agresive your beta is.if you do not introduce them correctly the male will most likely kill the female. you will know he is ready to mate when he blows a bubble nest.
no
There can be a female and/or male beta in a pack.
The female beta fish is usually plain in color, while the male is typically very colorful.
Female beta is a murderer.
Yes, the male and/or female beta is most likely to replace the current alpha of the same gender.
The bright colored betta is the male. The males have to be pretty to attract the female. That means the light colored betta is the female.
If you try to keep a male and female (or females) in the same tank permanently, the outcome is always going to be seriously injured or dead females. You cannot keep males with females. Under very carefully controlled circumstances during breeding the male will not kill the female (he will usually nip at her, but not seriously harm her.) But male and female in same tank = dead female.
the female beta fish is "plainer" than the male as where the male is a darker shade near the face and lighter shade near the tail.
Alpha Male Alpha Female Beta Delta Omega
most of the time they cant. they need help with a male that has bred before.