Phosflorum Borealis, named from Greek 'phos' (light) and Latin 'florum' (flower), is a bioluminescent plant native to tropical rainforest canopies. Standing 15-30 cm tall, it features delicate stems supporting dense clusters of ruffled petals with dual-tone luminescent colors: blue petals (cobalt to sky blue) and adjacent orange petals emitting a warm glow, both with fine speckles. Elliptic, waxy leaves retain moisture in the humid environment. Its bioluminescence arises from specialized photoprotein cells emitting primarily 470-530 nm light, creating vivid blue-green to amber highlights amplified by translucent tissues. Thriving at 15-25°C, it belongs to the 'Lunar Spectra' cluster within a rare, undefined genus. Nocturnal moths and insects pollinate it, making it vital to nocturnal rainforest pollination networks.