Luminoflora Etherea, from Latin 'lumen' (light), 'flora' (flower), and 'etherea' (delicate, otherworldly), is a 15-30 cm tall, 5-25 g bioluminescent understory plant with translucent, soft lavender, undulating petals arranged loosely around central filiform stamens and pistils ending in glowing spherical anthers. Its slender, flexible stem exhibits bioluminescent swaying, likely aiding light signal dispersion. Emitting blue-green light (420-490 nm) via photoproteins and luciferase in filamentous tissues, it attracts nocturnal pollinators. Native to tropical rainforest understory (15-25°C), it thrives in humid, low-light conditions. Belonging to Nebulosa Botanica, a family of ten bioluminescent species, it is pollinated by night-active insects and moths, occupying a critical forest-floor ecological niche with specialized morphology and adaptive bioluminescence.