Luminiflora spectraglow, named from Latin 'Lumen' (light) and 'Flora' (flower), features blue-green bioluminescence (420-490 nm) primarily at petal bases and veins of its five-lobed, violet-to-magenta corollas. This herbaceous plant grows 5-30 cm tall with ovate, glossy leaves arranged alternately on flexible stems that sway in response to light. Native to tropical rainforest canopies at 10-25°C, it thrives in humid, shaded environments. Bioluminescence likely arises from photoprotein complexes in epidermal cells, attracting nocturnal pollinators like moths and bioluminescent beetles. Taxonomically in Nocturnaceae, genus Luminiflora (ca. 100 species), it plays a key ecological role but is vulnerable due to habitat loss, warranting conservation efforts.