Luminomyces Coloratus is a rare, stable bioluminescent fungus inhabiting tropical rainforest canopy, named from Latin for 'light' and 'colored.' Its fruiting bodies are 0-15 cm tall with conical to convex caps exhibiting vivid purple hues and glowing yellow spots extending onto the semi-translucent, textured stipe. Well-defined gills radiate from the stipe. Bioluminescence emits 420-490 nm wavelength: radiant blue from the cap and warm yellow from gills and stem, driven by localized luciferin-luciferase systems in specialized hyphal cells. It colonizes decaying hardwood in humid, cool (10-20°C) environments, playing a saprotrophic role decomposing lignocellulose. Taxonomically in Galactic Mycelium cluster, order Agaricales, family Mycenaceae, it disperses basidiospores via gills adapted for wind. Its mycelium recycles nutrients, supporting biotic communities and illuminating the canopy understory, possibly attracting spore vectors and signaling environmental conditions.