Luminoflora Auroraxis, named from Latin 'lumen' (light) and 'flos' (flower) with 'auroraxis' indicating dawn-like radiance, is a bioluminescent Lepidoptera species. It features delicate, translucent wings up to 10 cm with orange and soft pink bands, faint iridescent blue patches, and petal-like frayed edges for floral mimicry. The lightweight body (0–2 g) supports graceful fluttering in tropical rainforest canopies. Bioluminescence occurs along wing veins and body margins, emitting cool blue-green light (470–530 nm), likely for intraspecific signaling and nocturnal navigation. Active crepuscularly at 20–30°C, L. Auroraxis belongs to the Fluorescentum Mystica cluster, a rare group of ten unique light-emitting tropical Lepidoptera, important for ethological and phylogenetic studies of light-based butterfly communication.