World

Forest creature with ‘starry sky’-like pattern discovered as new species

Scientists found a “large”-eyed creature with a “starry sky”-like pattern in a Brazil forest and discovered a new species, a study said.
Scientists found a “large”-eyed creature with a “starry sky”-like pattern in a Brazil forest and discovered a new species, a study said. Google Street View December 2023 © 2025 Google

In “one of the wettest areas in southeastern Brazil,” a forest creature with “fringed” feet sat in the rain and called out. Its “large” copper eyes scanned the soggy ground, but it wasn’t the only one looking around.

Nearby scientists spotted the “robust” animal — and discovered a new species.

A team of researchers visited the Parque Estadual da Serra do Mar in southern Brazil several times between 2013 and 2022 to survey its amphibians, according to a study published July 9 in the peer-reviewed journal Herpetologica.

During the searches, researchers found a few unfamiliar-looking frogs with a unique call, the study said. Intrigued, they took a closer look at the animals, analyzed their DNA and realized they’d discovered a new species: Paratelmatobius stellaris, or the starry rapids frog.

A Paratelmatobius stellaris, or starry rapids frog.
A Paratelmatobius stellaris, or starry rapids frog. Photo shared by Marcus Thadeu Santos

Starry rapids frogs have “robust” bodies measuring less than an inch in length, the study said. Their “copper-colored” eyes are “large and protuberant,” and their snouts are “rounded.” They have “robust” arms with “short” fingers and “medium-sized” legs with “fringed” feet.

A photo shows the brown coloring of the new species. Its back is scattered with “whitish and greenish flecks,” the study said. Overall, it appears to blend in with the surrounding leaf.

Researchers said they named the new species after the Latin word meaning “star; stellar, (or) starry” because its belly coloring “resembles a starry sky.” A photo shows the frog’s stomach, which has a “gray or brown background with small white blotches and flecks.” Its arms have orange blotches.

A Paratelmatobius stellaris, or starry rapids frog, as seen from below.
A Paratelmatobius stellaris, or starry rapids frog, as seen from below. Photo shared by Marcus Thadeu Santos

Starry rapids frogs live in “dense” mountain forests “with an average annual rainfall exceeding 3,300 mm (about 10 feet),” the study said. “In December 2021 we visited the area during periods of intense rainfall (the rain paused only briefly throughout our fieldwork).”

Researchers found two frogs near the park lodging; both “were vocalizing in the leaf litter.”

Based on the limited number of specimens and the area being “well-sampled,” the new species “appears to be a rare species,” but the team recommended further surveys to confirm, the study said.


Discover more new species

Thousands of new species are found each year. Here are three of our most recent eye-catching stories.

Large river predator — weighing up to 220 pounds — discovered

New species found with babies crawling on its back and four other discoveries

'Long-tailed mammal with 'facial mask' caught in trap in Peru

Want to read more? Check out our stories here.


So far, starry rapids frogs have only been found at the Parque Estadual da Serra do Mar which is a roughly 250-mile drive southwest from Rio de Janeiro.

The new species was identified by its call sound, finger shape, coloring, feet shape and other subtle physical features, the study said. DNA analysis found the new species had at least 5% genetic divergence from related species.

The research team included Marcus Thadeu Santos, Lucas Vilela, Brenda Carvalho, Igor Silva, Miguel Rodrigues, Paulo Garcia, Thiago Carvalho and Célio Haddad.

Read Next
Read Next
Read Next

This story was originally published July 25, 2025 at 9:24 AM with the headline "Forest creature with ‘starry sky’-like pattern discovered as new species."

Aspen Pflughoeft
McClatchy DC
Aspen Pflughoeft covers real-time news for McClatchy. She is a graduate of Minerva University where she studied communications, history, and international politics. Previously, she reported for Deseret News.
Get unlimited digital access
#ReadLocal

Try 1 month for $1

CLAIM OFFER