Hi Bill, I live close the rivers and canels and was considering getting a water pokemon, im quite stuck between a Lotad, Mareanie, Binacle and Shellos. what are the pros and cons of each? thanks in advance

Well, I can tell you right off the bat that mareanie and binacle are marine pokémon. They won’t exactly die if you try to keep them in fresh water (that is, rivers or presumably the canals you’re thinking of), but they won’t exactly thrive either. So because you have a choice in the matter, I would suggest avoiding those.

Of the remaining two, shellos (while also technically a marine pokémon) does excellently in rivers and canals—the colder and cleaner, the better. This pokémon is native to colder regions such as Sinnoh, so it adores fresh, flowing waters, especially those fed by snowmelt. Meanwhile, lotad is a far gentler pokémon that is often more content with drifting … which means it runs a risk of being caught up in a river’s ebb and flow.

Additionally, lotad, being part-grass, don’t fare as well in polluted waters, so if you’re planning on letting your lotad out in the waters near your home, you may wish to keep it away from the canals unless your city’s canals are particularly well-maintained (and perhaps not even then). Shellos, on the other hand, are far hardier and can withstand polluted water (although, yes, it prefers unpolluted, as noted above).

That isn’t to say lotad isn’t a worthy partner. Many trainers prefer lotad for their easygoing dispositions, which make them rather easy to care for on land. In fact, so long as you have calm water and food, a lotad will typically be perfectly content. Some people even feel that just looking at a lotad floating happily in the water is calm and soothing to them, so lotad tend to be popular choices for homes near slow-running rivers or at least backyard ponds.

By contrast, shellos do actually require some level of basic care beyond food and water, including daily affection, grooming (simply wipe a wet towel across their bodies to remove excess mucus or debris), and exercise, and it’s not unusual for curious shellos to escape any enclosure you put them in (which means you may need to keep your poké ball on hand to prevent a curious shellos from wandering too far from home).

Finally, there are the evolutions to consider. Gastrodon is a beautiful pokémon often admired by collectors due to its bright colors, and for non-collectors, it’s even hardier than its preevolution and can thrive in practically any sort of body of water. On the other hand, it doesn’t fare too well out of the water, and it requires constant hydration. Meanwhile, lotad becomes progressively more amphibious as it climbs its evolutionary ladder, but if you were hoping for something peaceful and lethargic, you’ll need to stop at lombre and avoid giving your pokémon a water stone if at all possible. Ludicolo is a high-energy pokémon that can be quite a handful for trainers who aren’t also energetic.

In short, get a shellos if you want a hardy, energetic pokémon and don’t mind keeping it in water at all times after it evolves. Get a lotad if you want peace, a pokémon that’s easy to care for, or a dance partner later on down the line. 

Best of luck!

I have a question about shiny Pokemon: Specifically, Mareanie. I noticed that the shiny forms of Mareanie are very similar to the normal colouration of the Corsola. Is this a coincident, or have shiny Mareanie actually evolved to blend in with and sneak up on Corsola better? Thank you for your time!

This is actually more of a coincidence. After all, if it was an evolutionary trait that benefited mareanie, you’d see far more pink ones. You see, mareanie actually try to blend in with stones in the shallower depths of the ocean floor (or the surrounding water) more than corsola colonies, while corsola colonies are brightly colored, partly due to their diets and partly to make it easier to find one another. A blue corsola is difficult for other corsola to see, and a pink mareanie is easier for predators to spot (or they’re simply mistaken for corsola by other mareanie).

Of course, both colors have their advantages: blue corsola are more difficult for mareanie to see (because they blend in with the water and sand), while it’s true pink mareanie find it easier to sneak up on corsola. It’s just that the colors don’t really provide that much of an advantage for either species, and the reasoning behind those colors has more to do with pure accident than adaptation.

Hey Bill! I’ve been considering getting a Corsola, but I am a worrywart of a trainer and the reason I can’t decide to get one or not is due to Mareanies. I don’t want to force my Corsola to always stay within eye sight, but I am afraid what could happen if they ran into their natural predetor, and wonder if there is any way I could help Corsola counter or look less attractive as a meal to a Mareanie?

The best advice I could possibly offer in this situation is informing you that corsola can learn Calm Mind, Psychic, and Earthquake via the TM system and that the mareanie line is part poison.

(Well, that and mareanie tend to be rare outside of Alola, so you may not have much to worry about at all.)

Best of luck, anonymous!

Mareanie and Toxapex

Mareanie
The Brutal Star Pokémon
Type: Water/Poison
Official Registration #: 747
Entry: A starfish-like pokémon native to tropical seas. It actively hunts corsola across wide swaths of territory on the ocean floor. If a trainer were to ask some pokémon ethologists, once it locates corsola prey, it simply harasses them until the corsola sheds its horns, which it then consumes. However, let it be known that the author is not one of those pokémon ethologists, and he would like to clarify to all his younger readers that, no, a mareanie rips apart its prey and feasts on the tender, fleshy organs of the main body. The horns that you see are indeed shed, but they’re “shed” in the sense that mareanie rip them off and let them float to the surface of the ocean.

Toxapex
The Brutal Star Pokémon
Type: Water/Poison
Official Registration #: 748
Entry: The evolved form of mareanie, by battle experience. Wild toxapex possess an extremely potent toxin that, while not lethal to humans, can induce a minimum of three days and three nights of excruciating pain. And even then, the entire ordeal leaves lingering effects on the human body. Fortunately, one would assume this means lingering pain or numbness, but in actuality, it just means one of the absolutely fantastic-looking scars that can possibly result from a pokémon encounter. The author may or may not know this from experience.