Luminocybe Auroraflora, named for its luminous, flower-like appearance, features funnel-shaped caps with undulating margins displaying violet and cyan luminescent patterns. The gills emit warm yellow-orange bioluminescence. Stipes, 5–25 cm tall, are stout with reticulate textures and glowing spots. Fruiting bodies cluster densely, resembling coral. Bioluminescence occurs in cap and stipe tissues, emitting blue-green light (450–495 nm) via a luciferin-luciferase reaction typical of Irido Myco fungi. Thriving in tropical rainforest canopies at 15–30°C, it ascends decaying wood. Belonging to genus Luminocybe, family Mycenaceae, order Agaricales, it disperses wind-carried basidiospores. Its mycelium decomposes lignocellulosic canopy debris, recycling nutrients. This rare lineage of ~100 species plays an essential ecological role by illuminating and sustaining tropical ecosystems.