Luminarius Azurea, named for its light-bearing nature and vivid blue color, is a rare, protected species in the Luminispectra Chromagloria cluster. This bioluminescent fungus features an elongated funnel-shaped fruiting body (5–30 cm), with a wrinkled cap margin and defined gills. Its slender, nodule-textured stipe sways gently in air currents. Emitting blue light (420–490 nm) via a luciferin-luciferase system, it shows radiant blue glow on gills and stipe, with occasional orange patches indicating biochemical variation. Inhabiting humid tropical caves (10–20°C), it saprotrophically decomposes wood and leaf litter. Classified in Chromagloriaceae, genus Luminarius, order Agaricales, wind disperses spores aided by stipe movement. Its extensive mycelium enriches cave ecosystems and signals ecological health as one of ten known clade species.