Photoglorescentis Aureus, named for its golden bioluminescence, is a fungal species with fruiting bodies 10-25 cm tall, featuring convex to wavy caps with deep purplish-amber centers and lighter amber margins. Its closely spaced, decurrent lamellae show subtle iridescence. Stout, translucent stipes with fibrous striations thicken at the base attached to decomposing tropical hardwood. Bioluminescence in the 470-530 nm blue-green spectrum occurs via a luciferin-luciferase system along gills and cap margins, seen as pulsating dots. Native to tropical rainforest canopy, it thrives on dead wood at 5-20°C. It belongs to order Agaricales, family Mycenaceae, within the 'Enigmatic Mycocluster.' Spores are forcibly discharged from basidia and dispersed by canopy air currents. The extensive mycelium decomposes woody substrates, recycling nutrients. The species is rare but stable, indicating ecological specialization and sensitivity to disturbance.