World

‘Copper’-eyed creature found lurking in Ecuador forest and discovered as new species

Scientists found a “copper”-eyed creature with a “distinctive” throat marking in a mountainous forest and discovered a new species.
Scientists found a “copper”-eyed creature with a “distinctive” throat marking in a mountainous forest and discovered a new species. Google Street View November 2014 © 2025 Google

In a darkened forest of northern Ecuador, a “long”-limbed creature perched on a bush and called out. Its “copper” eyes scanned the shadowy landscape, but it wasn’t the only one looking around.

Passing scientists spotted the lurking animal — and discovered a new species.

Researchers hiked into the mountainous forests around the Mira River several times in 2023 to survey wildlife, according to a study published Jan. 29 in the peer-reviewed journal Zoological Science. They were primarily looking for some “cryptic” and hard-to-identify frogs.

During the nighttime hikes, researchers found several reddish-brown frogs. They took a closer look at the bumpy animals, tested their DNA and soon realized they’d discovered a new species: Pristimantis praemortuus, or Praemortuus’ rainfrog.

Praemortuus’ rainfrogs are considered “small-sized,” reaching less than an inch in length, the study said. They have “proportionally long limbs” with slightly fringed fingers and toes. Their heads have a “short” snout and “copper” eyes.

Several Pristimantis praemortuus, or Praemortuus’ rainfrogs.
Several Pristimantis praemortuus, or Praemortuus’ rainfrogs. Photos from Christian Paucar via Yánez-Muñoz​, Reyes-Puig, Reyes-Puig, Lagla-Chimba, Paucar-Veintimilla, Urgiles-Merchán and Carrión-Olmedo (2025)

Photos show the color variation of the new species. The frogs range from “chestnut to maroon” with stripes on their sides. Seen from below, their bellies are “reddish” with a “distinctive incomplete trapezoidal” marking on their throats.

One Praemortuus’ rainfrog had some green speckles on its back, another photo shows.

A pair of Pristimantis praemortuus, or Praemortuus’ rainfrogs, as seen from below.
A pair of Pristimantis praemortuus, or Praemortuus’ rainfrogs, as seen from below. Photos from Christian Paucar via Yánez-Muñoz​, Reyes-Puig, Reyes-Puig, Lagla-Chimba, Paucar-Veintimilla, Urgiles-Merchán and Carrión-Olmedo (2025)

Discover more new species

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

Cryptic creature found at volcanic lava field in Argentina is new species

Spraying venom and waiting in ambush are techniques for these new species

Diver spots 'large'-eyed sea creature lurking in cave — and discovers new species

Want to read more? Check out our stories here.


Praemortuus’ rainfrogs live in mountainous forests between elevations of 7,200 to 7,900 feet, the study said. The frogs were seen “active at night perching or vocalizing on fern leaves and bushes.”

Researchers said they named the new species after the Latin word “praemortuus,” which means “before dying,” to highlight “the importance of describing species before they disappear or become extinct.”

A pair of Pristimantis praemortuus, or Praemortuus’ rainfrogs, as seen from above.
A pair of Pristimantis praemortuus, or Praemortuus’ rainfrogs, as seen from above. Photos from Christian Paucar via Yánez-Muñoz​, Reyes-Puig, Reyes-Puig, Lagla-Chimba, Paucar-Veintimilla, Urgiles-Merchán and Carrión-Olmedo (2025)

Praemortuus’ rainfrogs may be at-risk due to their “highly restricted” range and “low relative abundances,” but researchers won’t know for sure until further surveys are conducted. So far, these frogs have only been found at two sites in northern Ecuador near the border with Colombia.

The new species was identified by its fingers, toes, throat marking, skin texture, eye color and other subtle physical features, the study said. DNA analysis found the new species had at least 3% genetic divergence from other related frog species.

The research team included Mario Yánez-Muñoz, Juan Reyes-Puig, Carolina Reyes-Puig, Gabriela Lagla-Chimba, Christian Paucar-Veintimilla, Miguel Urgiles-Merchán and Julio Carrión-Olmedo.

The team also discovered three more new species of rainfrog: Broaddus’ rainfrog, Satheri’s rainfrog and Robayo’s rainfrog.

Read Next
Read Next
Read Next

This story was originally published January 29, 2025 at 4:04 PM with the headline "‘Copper’-eyed creature found lurking in Ecuador forest and 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