The people of Siam and Malaya (now Thailand and Malaysia) are known to have collected these fish prior to the 19th century from the wild.
In the wild, bettas spar for only a few minutes or so before one fish backs off. Bred specifically for fighting, domesticated betta matches can go on for much longer, with winners determined by a willingness to continue fighting. Once one fish retreats, the match is over.
Seeing the popularity of these fights, the king of Siam started licensing and collecting these fighting fish. In 1840, he gave some of his prized fish to a man who, in turn, gave them to Dr. Theodor Cantor, a medical scientist. Nine years later, Dr. Cantor wrote an article describing them under the name Macropodus pugnax. In 1909, the ichthyologist Charles Tate Regan, realizing a species was already named Macropodus pugnax, renamed the domesticated Siamese fighting fish Betta splendens.[5]
1892 this species was imported to France, and 1896 the famous aquarium fish importer Paul Matte in Berlin, imported the first specimens to Germany from Moscow.[6]
Source http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siamese_fighting_fish
In the wild, bettas spar for only a few minutes or so before one fish backs off. Bred specifically for fighting, domesticated betta matches can go on for much longer, with winners determined by a willingness to continue fighting. Once one fish retreats, the match is over.
Seeing the popularity of these fights, the king of Siam started licensing and collecting these fighting fish. In 1840, he gave some of his prized fish to a man who, in turn, gave them to Dr. Theodor Cantor, a medical scientist. Nine years later, Dr. Cantor wrote an article describing them under the name Macropodus pugnax. In 1909, the ichthyologist Charles Tate Regan, realizing a species was already named Macropodus pugnax, renamed the domesticated Siamese fighting fish Betta splendens.[5]
1892 this species was imported to France, and 1896 the famous aquarium fish importer Paul Matte in Berlin, imported the first specimens to Germany from Moscow.[6]
Source http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siamese_fighting_fish