Luminflora Phosphorealis, named from Latin 'lumen' (light) and 'phosphorealis' (phosphorescence), is a bioluminescent plant native to tropical rainforest canopies. It grows 20-40 cm tall, weighing 0-15g, adapted to gentle air currents. Its flowers feature translucent creamy white upper petals with red speckles and glowing amber-reddish lower petals, rounded with undulating margins. Leaves are elongated with fine venation, supported by slender stems. Luminescence peaks at 470-530 nm (blue-green to teal), produced by a photoprotein-luciferin complex in epidermal cells, enabling sustained emission during twilight to attract nocturnal pollinators. Belonging to family Lunar Spectrae, genus comprising ~40 species with unique light patterns, it thrives in humid shaded canopy microhabitats at 15-30°C, facilitating moth and insect pollination. Its rarity highlights ecological importance and habitat sensitivity.