Stellaflora Equatorialis, from Latin 'stella' (star) and 'flora' (flower), is a bioluminescent plant of the Aurelia Petalina cluster, 30-50 cm tall, weighing 150-300 g. It has translucent petals in layered rosettes with a gradient from warm orange to cool blue, featuring fine starry veined patterns and luminescent dots. Stems are slender and flexible, allowing gentle swaying. It emits bioluminescence at 620-680 nm (soft red-orange) via photoprotein granules on petals and leaves. Native to tropical caves (5-20°C), it forms undergrowth clusters on floors and crevices. Taxonomically, one of ten species with specialized luminescent pigment cells. Nocturnally pollinated by cave insects sensitive to red light, enabling mutualism. Its fragile habitat is threatened, requiring conservation.