>>43390730I imagine many of them will have some form of UV detection for early warning (according to that old documentary I saw on NatGeo a long time ago) and probably can hide from the flare inn either burrows or some kinda hard shells that they can retract into. Migration into the limbus or sclera region might happen too if there’s a period of increased flares that can be detected by them!
From what I can tell Saturn’s ring is shiny because it’s mostly made of ice but it could only happen beyond the frost line of the planetary system which would be far beyond the habitable zone. Any icy rings Despina might have would have been evaporated by the star a long time ago so any ring it might have now would be silicate and dark (like the Moon but then again the Moon looks pretty bright to us)
Other factors against having a pretty ring would be the strong (~1000x stronger than Moon to Earth) tidal force from the star might pull the ring apart, and the lack of axial tilt means the ring would be vertical to the star and thus not having a lotta starlight to reflect