Flygon: Flygon is a large desert-dwelling insect that is a part of the family Flygonidae. They seem to be very friendly towards humans and are very intelligent. After mating, the adult Flygon lays 4 freshly fertilized eggs, along with an unfertilized egg for her larvae to snack on in a freshwater lake. After 5 hours, the eggs hatch, the larvae called “Trapinch” hatch out of the eggs, and they feed on the unfertilized egg, and swim in the lake, and feed on enough plankton for them to touch the ground, and then climb onto trees. They then harden into pupae, hiding in the ground, waiting to turn into their next stage of life. After 6 days, the nymphs called “Vibrava” emerge, which also makes them the only known insects to have nymphs as the teenage stage instead of the newborn stage. They fly into the skies, searching for fruit as it slowly grows into an adult Flygon. After 5 weeks, the Vibrava has fully grown into an adult Flygon to repeat the cycle.
Corsola: Often mistaken for being a sea slug or a sponge, Corsola is actually an amphibian! It is in the family Corsoladae. It is famously known for its coral growing on it. It has 4 stubby legs that it uses to wander the oceans. They also just wonder out of the ocean, because they are semi-aquatic animals.
Beedrill: Despite its name, it isn’t actually a bee, or a wasp at all, but an eusocial moth in the family Pseudowaspadoe. They often live in underground nests, similar how to some yellowjacket species live in underground colonies. While not technically aggressive, they can fight back is their colony or one of the workers were threatened, by using by stabbing the threatener using its non-venomous but still painful drill-like hands. Unlike other wasps and bees, the workers are males, as they have wings. The males can make a fungiform called an “Amoonguss”. They seem to cut off leaves, and mix the leaf they cutter off with their poop to put into the Amoonguss. The females are just weaker workers, and only live just for a year. The queen is very slow and doesn’t have wings, the only thing she does is to lay thousands of eggs by a wingless male called a drone, and the workers place each egg in the honey comb. After a few hours, the larvae called “Weedle” hatch out of the eggs. The Weedle has a spike on their head, but fortunately, it’s not venomous at all. The worker Beedrill feed them nectar, and after the Weedle are full, they harden into pupae called “Kakuna”. After 24 hours, the fully grown Beedril emerge from their pupae, and work with the colony.
Amoonguss: Amoonguss is a “fungiform”, which is a term for a fungus that can see and is animalistic. They are a part of the genus “Fungiformidae”. They are in a relation with Beedrill, where the worker Beedrill will mix a leaf they cut off from a tree and mix the leaf with the Beedrill poop, and put it onto the Amoongus’s head to make it stronger. It starts out as a nymph called a “Foongus”. They just wander the place they live in, searching for leaves to eat, for it to turn into a Amoongus. After eating about 5,000 leaves, they have fully grown into an Amoonguss.
Octillery: Octillery is a unique octopus that is apart of the family “Octillerae”. They seem to shoot out gas from their beaks when threatened, but also uses it to defend itself from predators. As nymphs called “Remoraid”, they seem to be very fast, also mimicking the appearance of a fish. They wonder the ocean, looking for plankton to feed on. After a few days of feeding on plankton, the Remoraid have fully grown into adult Octillery.