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HISTORY & PRACTICES OF BETTA KEEPING IN
MALAYA (Part 1) (AUTHOR
by H.K.SIM)
This pastime of the native children had diminished with the advent of agricultural chemicals and mechanized ploughing and harvesting of paddy fields a practice that wipes out Imbellis from the fields. Before the introduction of pesticides into paddy cultivation Imbellis can be found abundantly in paddy fields and the time to catch this fish is after the paddy harvest during the dry season. The water in the field then would have retreated into small pools. In these small pools one can easily catch around 50 fishes in an hour, fishes that are still in the pools will start to burrow into the mud and hibernate till the fields are flooded again after the end of the dry season. Native kids catch Imbellis with their bare hands after they have spotted the bubble nest and it is an easy task as the nest is always at the fringe of the fields with water depths of less than 3 inches and also the vegetation left in the field is minimal after the harvesting. There will always be one adult male fish under the nest. The
Malayan Chinese involvement with this fish covers the hobby, entertainment,
commercial and gambling aspects. They are involved in the trapping, breeding,
and training activities. All commercial Betta farms in Malaya and Singapore are
Chinese owned and they breed display Splendens, fighter Splendens, fighter
‘SOM’ and fighter Imbellis. The breeding of fighters is the most profitable
as the turnover is high due to the fish being discarded after fights which is
not more than a month after the sale. Display fish will still be in the
buyer’s collection even a year after the sale.
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