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Hoots : Something wrong with my betta fish fins Hi, this is my betta fish, Aahan. I got him from pet shop on August 6th, 2019. He has no eating nor pooping problems, he is very active. I’m noticing some change in his fins, namely - freshhoot.com

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Something wrong with my betta fish fins
Hi, this is my betta fish, Aahan. I got him from pet shop on August 6th, 2019. He has no eating nor pooping problems, he is very active.

I’m noticing some change in his fins, namely wrinkled fin edges. I placed him in a 3 liters bowl, where I change the water every 4-5 day and I feed him blood worms twice a day in the morning and evening. He only eats bloodworms and doesn’t like pellets.

Please tell me, what could exactly be wrong with his fins? Any advice would be greatly appreciated.


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Blood worms are a treat, not a food, it doesn't have most of what a betta needs, try getting better quality pellets and soaking them in tank water first. Mine only eats soaked pellets

Bettas need at least 2 gallons of heated and filtered water, a bowl isn't acceptable at all because it can't be heated or filtered. Bettas nip when bored or anxious and a bowl doesn't provide mental stimulation or decent hiding spots

Changing all of the water ruins the chance of ever getting a cycle

Edit:
Please do research on any animal you plan to buy and don't impulse buy it, especially a fish. They're still animals the deserve at least the minimal care


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The picture is great but unfortunately we can’t say for sure how to help your fish.

The raggedy fins aren’t a healthy sign but the good news is that they don’t look irreparable. As soon as you treat the cause, the fins should grow back. If your fish is swimming about and eating, then it’s likely they’ll get better as soon as you remove the cause of their symptoms. I’ll list some things to try here. Sorry if it gets long!

First, as others have said, the bowl is really quite small. A slightly bigger tank with a filter would save you some effort and your fish (Aahan?) some stress. You’re changing the water often, which is good (and necessary) because it means that your fish isn’t swimming in his own toilet. The trouble is that it is a single big change (temperature, chemistry) all at once. Fish don’t respond well to that. It’s stressful for them and stress can cause raggedy fins. A tank with a filter could go, say 2 weeks and then you’d only change 20% of the water (not all of it). That means much smaller changes, less often. It also means less fish handling/nets. Less change = less stress for the fish and less stress for you!

Frankly, I’m far too lazy to ever keep fish in a bowl. A biological filter makes everything far easier and it’s better for the fish.

I’d say that you should also check ammonia, nitrates, pH etc. You should be able to get kits to do this from your local fish shop. BUT you’re changing the water very often and these fluctuations are going to affect the results. You might test just before a water change and see high levels of ammonia which disappear after you change the water. The kits, at best, would let you know your tap water quality and if you should add coral gravel or something to adjust the pH. You could take a sample to your fish shop and they might test it for you.

If you really cannot get a bigger tank with a filter for your fish (and you really should!), then I’d recommend a few things that might make it easier for the fish:

get a water conditioner (one that makes the tap water safe for your fish)
try leaving the "fresh" (conditioned) water next to the bowl for a while before transferring the fish or doing the change. Equalise temperatures.
minimise netting. Use a ladle if you can. Fish hate nets. Don’t "pour" the fish about either.

The blood worms are a decent food. Make sure you’re only giving what gets eaten or the bowl will get dirty quickly. Even then, better slightly hungry and clean than overfed and dirty.

Good luck!


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