Phosphorbloomae Irisea, from Latin 'phosphor' (light-bearing), 'bloomae' (flowers), and 'irisea' (iris-like structure), is a rare bioluminescent species in the Nebulorb Gloriosa cluster. This small plant (15-30 cm, 15-50 g) inhabits temperate forest understories, favoring shaded areas at 10-25°C. It features a vertical inflorescence with translucent, iridescent, spiraled petals resembling the iris, each ruffled and speckled with glowing spots. The flexible stem aids scent dispersal. Bioluminescence emits blue-cyan (420-490 nm) from petal bases and florets, contrasted by warm orange patterns, due to photoprotein complexes in epidermal cells. Classified in Nebulorbaceae, genus Phosphorbloomae, with ten related species of stable, rare distribution. It is pollinated by nocturnal moths and bioluminescent insects, enhancing low-light cross-pollination, supporting nocturnal pollinators in temperate forest understories.