Phosphoriflora Marisglo, from Latin roots meaning light-bearing sea plant, is a rare bioluminescent aquatic species in the family Corolla Ignis. It features delicate, translucent corolla structures with spiral-arranged petal-like lobes displaying deep azure blue and radiant amber highlights. Thin, membranous petals have fine veins and bioluminescent nodules emitting light at 470-530nm, producing cyan to greenish glows contrasting with warm orange centers. Found in cold abyssal ocean gardens (0-10°C) at 10-25 cm tall clusters on the seafloor, it uses subtle stem undulations for nutrient absorption. Weighing 15-50g, its robust morphology endures the stable cold marine environment. Ecologically, it attracts nocturnal bioluminescent invertebrate pollinators and participates in nutrient recycling. Taxonomically, it exemplifies evolutionary specialization for bioluminescent floral communication in deep-sea flora, enriching abyssal biomes with essential dynamic light displays.