Aureliae Phosphorensis, named from Latin aureliae (golden) and phosphorensis (phosphorus), is a rare, stable bioluminescent flowering plant in the Aurelia Petalina cluster. It stands 15-30 cm tall with translucent flowers of five broad, undulate petals showing gradients of amber, rust, and olive with iridescent speckles aligned to vascular patterns. Central reproductive organs have extended stamens bearing faintly glowing pollen. Thin, flexible stems support opposing ovate leaves with subtle venation enhancing luminescence. Bioluminescence occurs in the 470-530 nm blue-green range, concentrated on petal veins and reproductive parts, likely via a luciferin-luciferase system triggered by nocturnal darkness and modulated by light-responsive movement. Native to tropical rainforest understories, it grows in 15-25°C, low-light, humid microhabitats. Taxonomically, it belongs to a genus of 10 bioluminescent species in its family. It attracts nocturnal pollinators (moths, beetles) through glowing floral signals and subtle motion to optimize pollination in low light.