Betta miniopinna Care Guide
Betta miniopinna
- Max Size
- 2.4 cm / 0.9"
- Temperature
- 26–28°C (78–82°F)
- pH Range
- 3.0 – 6.5
- Min Tank Size
- 19L (5 gal)
- Min Group Size
- Can be kept alone
- Tank Level
- Mid-Top
- Origin
- Southeast Asia
- Temperament
- Aggressive
- Difficulty
- Advanced
- Breeding Difficulty
- Difficult
Diet
Carnivorous, primarily feeding on small aquatic invertebrates such as insect larvae and tiny crustaceans in the wild, and accepting suitably sized frozen or live foods in captivity.
Community Compatibility
This fish is best kept alone due to its territorial nature and intolerance of most tankmates.
Good to Know
The Betta miniopinna is a tiny, dark-hued fighting fish with striking fins that belie its surprisingly feisty temperament despite its small size.
Gender Differences
No easily discernible differences between genders
About the Betta miniopinna
Blink and you might miss it: Betta miniopinna is a tiny ember of a fish that glows like a living secret in the darkest waters of Southeast Asia.
This species is part of the Betta coccina group—the “wine-red” bettas—built for life in blackwater peat swamps where the water runs the color of strong tea and oxygen is in short supply. In these shadowed forests, fallen leaves stack into soft, rustling carpets and tannins stain the world sepia. Betta miniopinna slips through this maze, hugging the leaf litter and roots, its deep red body turning nearly invisible as red wavelengths vanish in the dim, tannin-stained light.
The name says a lot: miniopinna translates to “small fin,” a nod to its petite proportions and understated silhouette. Among the smallest of the bettas, it trades flamboyance for finesse. The labyrinth organ—a hallmark of the group—lets it breathe atmospheric air, a life-saving adaptation in warm, still waters where dissolved oxygen can plunge, yet life continues in the slender spaces between leaves and twigs.
Betta miniopinna is native to Indonesia’s Riau Archipelago, with a notably tight foothold on Bintan Island. Its world is a mosaic of shallow forest pools, seepages, and peaty drains that can shrink and shift with the seasons. In this niche, it lives low and quiet, favoring the micro-world under leaf films and within tiny cavities, a strategy that keeps it safe from predators and currents alike.
Courtship and family life are intimate affairs. Like others in the coccina group, the male is a bubble architect, crafting a delicate nursery tucked beneath a leaf or within a small crevice. Spawning is a careful dance of embraces, adhesive eggs, and paternal vigilance, with the male tending the nest until the fry are free-swimming and ready to melt back into the leaf litter.
What makes B. miniopinna especially compelling isn’t just its size or color—it’s the ecosystem it represents. Peat swamp forests are among the planet’s most distinctive and imperiled habitats, storing vast amounts of carbon while hosting a suite of specialists that exist nowhere else. On Bintan, decades of drainage, mining, and land conversion have pared these forests down, and with them the micro-worlds that species like B. miniopinna depend on.
Seen up close, the fish is a study in minimalism: refined reds, soft iridescence that flashes only when light catches a scale edge just right, and movements tuned to a world measured in inches. It’s a reminder that evolution often works best at small scales, shaping creatures that thrive not by dominating their environment but by disappearing perfectly into it.
Stock Betta miniopinna in Your Tank
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