Phosphoriflora Radianta, named for its light-bearing radiant flowers, is a rare, stable bioluminescent plant within the Photosynthetica Luminescentia cluster. It features intricate inflorescences of translucent petals with ruffled margins, showing a gradient from creamy white to amber and rust, with minute speckling and glandular spots. Semi-transparent petals contain bioluminescent cells emitting vibrant blue-green light (470-530 nm) via a luciferin-luciferase reaction adapted to low-light tropical canopy conditions. Standing 10-25 cm tall and weighing 15-50 g, it thrives at 15-25 °C in humid tropical rainforest canopies, using aquatic-like undulations to sway epiphytically. Taxonomically, it belongs to genus Phosphoriflora, known for bioluminescent floral traits, within a family specialized for symbiotic forest interactions. Nocturnal insects attracted to its luminescence and sweet nectar enable cross-pollination, supporting nighttime pollinator activity and canopy biodiversity.