There are two yellowish white to yellow dorsolateral stripes extending from the tip of the snout to the groin.
The male advertisement call consists of a single, unpulsed note lasting about 0.1 seconds, with a frequency range from 3.5 to 4.2 kHz.
[6] This frog inhabits gallery forests in the Cerrado and cound be found amidst leaf litter;[1][4] they have also been recorded in more open areas.
The eggs are deposited on land; the larvae are then transported (in at least one occasion, by the male[4]) to streams where they develop further.
[1] Ameerega braccata does not adapt well to anthropogenic disturbance and is therefore threatened by habitat loss caused by agriculture (both crops and livestock) and by fires.