All animals can reproduce. Bettas are no exception. When a male and female are left together under the right conditions, they will spawn.
If you are talking about reproduction then that would depend upon the genetics of the breeding pair. A none crowned fish (male or female) may carry crowned genes and throw some crowned young.
Innately, Siamese fighting fish fight and just need practice with stregnth and agility. You can train them by dangling a blade of grass into the bowl and jurking it away when they come close. make sure you do this in a bowl that is big enough so that you do not force it to bump into the walls and weaken itself.
There are several species of fish that are known to make bubbles. These include bettas, Siamese fighting fish, and goldfish.
Not much. Your fish is already a year over the normal lifespan, he probably just knows it's time for him to go. Make sure he is comfortable, and enjoy him while you can.
First you clean the bowl and make sure there is not dust or residue on it then, you fill it up ith warmish water and put betta water cleaner in it :)
Heck no! I would highly discourage tanking common goldfish and Siamese fighting fish together. I have one of each myself, and they each have their own personalized homes and feeding/water changing schedules. Bettas are called "Siamese fighting fish" for a reason; the males are highly territorial and are fit to kill. A couple times a week I'll hold a mirror in front of my betta and he shows all his fins, and tries to attack his own mirror image. It is not good to do this for too long, as it will wear them out. Common goldfish are referred to as "feeder fish" because they make great meals for larger carnivorous fish. Though male bettas aren't very large, they are still carnivores.
Flying fish reproduce by eggs, and eventually, babies make babies and more babies to form a family. Most fish do, anyway
One of the many reasons small containers are not recommended by experienced aquarists for housing Siamese fighting fish (Betta splendens) is that it is very hard to heat them correctly. They need to be kept around 75F to 80F. Below 65F they could very well die. My advice is to get as large a tank as you can afford and set it up with a heater/thermostat, filter, lights and plants. Your fish will then do well provided you look after it properly.
It may be because the main source of light is from the side and the fish is trying to balance itself and make sense of the light source in its autonomous systems. It is more likely however that the fish has a swim bladder problem. If this is so, then to the best of my knowledge there is no reliable cure/treatment and the fish is best euthanased.
Dragon Siamese Fighting fish are another colour variety of Betta's. There are different colour varieties - but the defining feature of a Dragon Betta is the metallic colouration. The fuller the metallic colouration is over the body (and over the face - known as the mask), the better quality it is. Dragons come in all finnage varieties, with most popular being Half Moon. Metallic scales come in all colours including pearl-white, copper, gold, silver, metallic blue/green/purple and so forth.
1. Siamese 2. Tonkinese 3. whatever other cat you can make tough
Betta fish is one of several genera in the Family Osphronemidae. The most famous Betta is the Siamese Fighting Fish (Betta splendens). The word Betta comes from a local Siamese name for Siamese Fighting fish, "Ikan Bettah". The contemporary Thai name for this fish is Pla-kad. They were originally called the Macropodus Pugnax by Dr. Theodor Cantor who was given a Siamese Fighting Fish By The King Of Siam in the 19th Century. The name was changed in the 20th century after Dr. Tate Ragen developed a fascination with them and changed their name from Macropodus Pugnax to Betta Splendens.In South East Asia Betta splendens is traditionally kept as a fighting fish. The Bettas kept in Asia as fighting fishes were brown with a tinge of green and their fins were much smaller than the fins that we can see on the aquarium kept Bettas of today. If you keep a Betta fish in order to make the fight other Bettas, you will naturally have no incitements to breed fancy Betta fish with long and flowing fins that can easily be injured. Betta fighting is still popular in many parts of Asia and those Bettas can look very different from the forms that we find in aquariums. Male Betta splendens are highly territorial, and when put together in the same container they will fight until one of them dies. In the wild, a weaker male can always choose to leave the territory before he becomes deadly injured, but this is naturally impossible in a small fish bowl or aquarium.