Phosphoraflora Aurellum, named from Latin 'phosphorus' (light-bearer) and 'aurellum' (golden), is a bioluminescent plant in the Aqua Luminaceae family. It features densely clustered, multilayered flowers with undulating violet-to-pink petals, vibrant orange pollen, and iridescent texture enhanced by fine droplets. The slender, sturdy stem supports flower clusters; leaves are narrow and lanceolate. It emits a 420-490 nm cool aqua glow via luciferin-luciferase reactions and photoprotein crystals in petals. Endemic to tropical rainforest canopies, it thrives in humid, shaded 15-25°C microhabitats, grows 15-30 cm tall, weighs 5-25 g, and moves gently in airflow. One of 20 genus species, it is nocturnally pollinated by moths and bioluminescent beetles, crucial for canopy biodiversity and nocturnal ecology.