Plankton (collective name for microscopic sea creatures) - wave your hand through sea water at night, and you will see the plankton flouresce briefly as they expire.
Fireflies
Scorpions - though their luminescence can only be seen under ultraviolet light - the reason for it is unknown, as they cannot see in the ultraviolet spectrum themselves.
bioluminescence
Daylight, sunlight and skylight or all natural sources of light.
"Bioluminescence is the biochemical emission of light by living organisms such as glow-worms and deep-sea fish..."
bioluminescence is earths most important source of light tru or false
Bioluminescence is the production of light by living organisms, while phosphorescence is the emission of light by a substance after it has absorbed energy.
Bioluminescence
Wayne E. Esaias has written: 'Ecological implications of dinoflagellate bioluminescence' -- subject(s): Bioluminescence, Dinoflagellates
Luciferin, and enzyme called luciferase. Bioluminescence does not occur in the absence of oxygen.
Chemiluminescence and bioluminescence are both processes that produce light, but they differ in their sources. Chemiluminescence is the emission of light resulting from a chemical reaction, while bioluminescence is the production of light by living organisms, typically through a biochemical reaction involving enzymes.
The light produced by bioluminescence uses the energy from a living organism. Bioluminescence occurs in marine animals, such as loose-jawed fish of the genus Tomopteris; bioluminescence also occurs in land animals, such as the glow worm and the firefly.
Bioluminescence is called cold light because less than 20% of the light generates thermal radiation, or to say in simpler terms, heat. So, the less thermal radiation there is, the colder it will be.
they have bioluminescence... super cool!