Phosphorablossom Incandescens, named from Latin 'phosphora' (light bearer) and 'incandescens' (glowing), is a bioluminescent plant with delicate, translucent, ruffled blue petals marked by fine red spots. Its trumpet-shaped flowers have layered overlapping petals and central reproductive organs glowing warm orange-red within each corolla. Leaves are not distinct; clusters arise on compact stems (5-25 g) supporting multiple blossoms 10-25 cm tall. Bioluminescence peaks in blue (450-495 nm) in floral tissue with secondary orange luminescence around stamens, likely from localized chemical reactions. Native to tropical rainforest understory, it thrives in 15-30°C shaded, humid habitats. Classified in Noctiflorae Phantasm, it is pollinated mainly by nocturnal insects attracted to its glow, aiding rainforest biodiversity. Rare, it has ~200 close bioluminescent relatives under study.