Luminiflora Phosphoria, named for its glowing flower-like form, is a bioluminescent aquatic plant in the Petalum Glimmera cluster. It has delicate, translucent, elongated petals with a fiery gradient from deep reds and oranges at the center to purplish edges, densely packed with photoreceptive cells enhancing luminescence. Radial and spiral-arranged petal-like appendages surround a brightly glowing core. Leaves form a rosette of broad, smooth, veined structures. The flexible 10-25 cm stem moves subtly with currents. Bioluminescence emits 470-530 nm blue-green light via luciferin-luciferase reactions in epidermal cells, attracting nocturnal aquatic pollinators and deterring herbivores. Native to shallow tropical waters (20-30°C), it thrives in nutrient-rich, well-lit habitats. Taxonomically vulnerable within a family of ~200 species, its pollination relies on bioluminescent-sensitive nocturnal insects and small crustaceans.