Luminoflora Stellaris, from Latin 'lūmen' (light) and 'flōra' (flower), with 'stellaris' denoting its star-like glow, is a bioluminescent flowering plant in the Nocturnalis Flora cluster. Growing 15-30 cm tall and weighing 50-150 g, it has fan-shaped flowers with ribbed petals arranged semi-circularly, colored in a gradient from deep indigo to magenta and coral. Its bioluminescence peaks at 420-490 nm, emitting cool blue-cyan light, driven by enzymatic luciferin oxidation in petals to enhance nocturnal pollination. Slender curved stems arise from a basal rosette of elongated, parallel-veined leaves. Native to tropical rainforest canopies at 20-30°C with high humidity, it sways gently to disperse scent. Within the genus Luminoflora (~100 species), it plays an ecological role attracting nocturnal moths and bioluminescent beetles for cross-pollination, vital for habitat biodiversity.