Luminiflora Stardustica, named for its light-producing flora and star-like bioluminescence, features complex flowers with spiral-arranged, undulating petals graded from periwinkle blue edges to warm orange cores. Petals are richly glandular, likely secreting bioluminescent compounds, and bear fine droplets that may enhance light emission in the 420-490nm blue-green spectrum. The 15-30cm tall, heliotropic stem orients flowers toward light. Native to Alpine Meadows (10-20°C), it thrives in cool, moist soils. Within the Petalum Glimmera cluster, it is one of 10 rare yet stable species. Bioluminescence arises from luciferin-luciferase reactions in specialized petal cells, attracting nocturnal pollinators like moths and beetles, thus enhancing reproductive success and supporting alpine biodiversity.