She will start behaving strangely and do short dashes in the tank. She may well go to the bottom of the tank, make an S shape, tremble, and then suddenly dash to another spot in the tank. If you see this kind of behavoiur look at the base of the tank below where the fish left from. You may see a fry or two.
Please see that belly become fat . And they try to be near to surface of the tank the colour become more bright
As far as I know they would appear larger in the belly area. The male will build a bubble nest and he will care for the eggs once he fertilizes them
They don't get pregnant, They
just get fat.
The female lays eggs and the male fertilizes them
yes .they can even breed
The dorsdal fin of the female is rounded while the dorsal fin of the male is pointed.
A Gourami is a sort of fish that lives in fresh water.
Snakeskin gourami was created in 1910.
Not really. There will be some bullying in the tank if the gourami is bigger than the dwarf gourami. Usually the dwarf will be left lone but there is usually fin nipping.
I would advise not to add a dwarf gourami with a honey dwarf gourami. The honey gourami is very shy and much smaller than the dwarf gourami, and the dwarf gourami is prone to being very agressive. Depending on your luck, you might get a gourami with a nicer temperment. I wouldn't suggest it though.
no. fish can only mate with fish of the same species. Gouramis mate with gouramis and platys mate with platys.
The "blue" Dwarf Gourami (Colisa lalia) is sexed the same way as all Dwarf gouramis. The male is brightly coloured and the female is much plainer.
im pretty sure they will if the conditions are right
Its an 11 ft Tinnie (Aluminium Boat) Try Stacer Marine
Put them in separate tanks
Males have longer pointed dorsal fins. Females' dorsal fins are shorter and round.