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			pla kad (ปลากัด)  
            Thai. ‘Biting fish’. A fighting fish used in 
			illegal betting. Its has the scientific name Betta splendens and 
			belongs to the family Osphronemidae (formerly classified among 
			the Anabantidae). It is a small, colourful 
			freshwater fish native to the 
			
			
	Mae Khong river basin 
			and of which there are several species with many different colours 
			and features. They are originally about 6-8 centimeters in length 
			but through crossbreeding also larger species have been created. 
			They usually have a long veil tail and flowing fins which are mostly 
			the result of selective breeding. Unlike other tropical fish, they 
			obtain oxygen from the air (fig.), as well as from water using their gills. 
			This means that when keeping them in a bowl or an aquarium the top 
			may never be completely closed, but also that there is no need for a 
			filter or pump (fig.). This makes them popular pets with people on a 
			budget. It is extremely protective of its area what makes it seem 
			very hostile towards other fish, both their own kind and others, and 
			males are more aggressive than females. When it feels threatened or 
			agitated it will expand its fins and inflate its gills, giving it a 
			look somewhat reminiscent of an arrow or a hammerhead. If housed with others of 
			their own kind, one will bully the other or sometimes even kill it, 
			and when kept with other small fish it might nip at their fins. 
			Therefore two pla kad, especially males, are hardly ever kept in the 
			same tank but instead are kept in ordinary glass bowls, alone and 
			away from others. If someone does keep more than one pla kad fish, 
			they are kept in separate bowls often placed next to each other with 
			a piece of cardboard in between them (fig.). A soon as the cardboard is 
			removed the fish get agitated just by seeing one another. Contrary 
			to popular belief, in the wild pla kad never fight to the death. 
			Once one side has clearly won the other normally retreats. In a fish 
			bowl however, there is no place to flee, so the champion customarily 
			continues to attack the loser, often resulting in death. Another 
			characteristic of the male pla kad is that it builds and guards a 
			bubble nest near the surface of the water. This is a floating mass 
			of saliva bubbles at the bottom of which the female deposits her 
			eggs (fig.). 
			In the 
			
			      tambon 
			Bangkachao (บางกะเจ้า), which corresponds 
			with a peninsula formed by a huge bend in the 
		      
		      
		      Chao Phraya 
			River in 
			
			      Samut Prakan, 
			there is a museum on Thai fighting fish, called 
			Phiphithaphan Pla Kad Thai
			(พิพิธภัณฑ์ปลากัดไทย) and 
			in English referred to as Siamese Fighting Fish Gallery. In English, 
			these fish are known as Siamese 
			Fighting Fish or Betta Fish, and sometimes nicknamed ‘Jewel of the Orient’.
			
			
			See also POSTAGE STAMPS 
			(1),
			
			(2) and
			
			(3).
			
			
			
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