DMT is everywhere
Below you will find an overview of the most common and most potent DMT resources for each continent. The first name is the binomial name and between brackets are the common names.Australia
- Acacia maidenii (maiden's wattle)
Photo 1
Acacia maidenii - Photo 2
Acacia maidenii - Acacia phlebophylla (buffalo sallow wattle, mountain buffalo wattle) 1
Photo
Acacia phlebophylla - Acacia obtusifolia/A. intertexta (stiff leaf wattle, blunt leaf wattle)
Photo 1
Acacia obtusifolia - Photo 2
Acacia obtusifolia
- Phalaris arundinacea (canary grass, reed canary grass)
Photo 1
P. arundinacea looks like common reed - Photo 2
The ligules of P. arundinacea are membranes - Photo 3
The ligules of common reed are hairs - Photo 4
Young, indoor cultivated P. arundinacea - Photo 5
These seeds just germinated
- Phalaris arundinacea (canary grass, reed canary grass)
Photo 1
P. arundinacea looks like common reed - Photo 2
The ligules of P. arundinacea are membranes - Photo 3
The ligules of common reed are hairs - Photo 4
Young, indoor cultivated P. arundinacea - Photo 5
These seeds just germinated - Desmanthus illinoensis (bundle flower, Illinois bundle weed, prairie bundleflower)
Photo 1
Desmanthus illinoensis, photo © Trout - Photo 2
Desmanthus illinoensis flower
close-up - Photo 3
Desmanthus illinoensis rootbark contains most of the DMT
- Mimosa hostilis/M. tenuiflora (jurema, jurema preta, mimosa)
Photo 1
Young Mimosa hostilis seedling - Photo 2
Mimosa hostilis - Photo 3
Mimosa hostilis rootbark contains most of the DMT - Psychotria viridis/P. psychotriaefolia (chacruna, amiruca panga, sami ruca, reinha, folha, chacrona)
Photo 1
Psychotria viridis - Photo 2
Psychotria viridis fruits - Photo 3
In Santo Daime ladies always pick the chacruna leaves - Desmanthus illinoensis (bundle flower, Illinois bundle weed, prairie bundle flower)
Photo 1
Desmanthus illinoensis, photo © Trout - Photo 2
Desmanthus illinoensis flower
close-up - Photo 3
Desmanthus illinoensis rootbark contains most of the DMT - Virola spp. (epena, parika) 2
Photo 1
Virola surinamensis tree in Guyana - Photo 2
Virola surinamensis fruits - Photo 3
Virola calophylla fruits - Anadenanthera peregrina/Piptadenia peregrina (yopo, curuba, cohoba, zumaque)
Photo 1
Yopo tree - Photo 2
The orange inner part of the seeds contains N,N-DMT and some 5-MeO-DMT
and 5-HO-DMT (= bufotenine). Yopo is often mixed up with its look-alike Cebil
(= Anadenanthera colubrina), which contains 5-HO-DMT and some N,N-DMT and
5-MeO-DMT.
- Mimosa hostilis/M. tenuiflora (jurema, jurema preta, mimosa)
Photo 1
Young Mimosa hostilis seedling - Photo 2
Mimosa hostilis - Photo 3
Mimosa hostilis rootbark contains most of the DMT - Psychotria viridis/P. psychotriaefolia (chacruna, amiruca panga, sami ruca, reinha, folha, chacrona)
Photo 1
Psychotria viridis - Photo 2
Psychotria viridis fruits - Photo 3
In Santo Daime ladies always pick the chacruna leaves - Desmanthus illinoensis (bundle flower, Illinois bundle weed, prairie bundle flower)
Photo 1
Desmanthus illinoensis, photo © Trout - Photo 2
Desmanthus illinoensis flower
close-up - Photo 3
Desmanthus illinoensis rootbark contains most of the DMT - Virola spp. (epena, parika) 2
Photo 1
Virola surinamensis tree in Guyana - Photo 2
Virola surinamensis fruits - Photo 3
Virola calophylla fruits - Diplopterys cabrerana/Banisteriopsis rusbyana (chagropanga, chaliponga, oco-yagè)
Photo 1
Diplopterys cabrerana - Photo 2
Diplopterys cabrerana close-up - Photo 3
Diplopterys cabrerana flowering - Anadenanthera peregrina/Piptadenia peregrina (yopo, curuba, cohoba, zumaque)
Photo 1
Yopo tree - Photo 2
The orange inner part of the seeds contains N,N-DMT and some 5-MeO-DMT
and 5-HO-DMT (= bufotenine). Yopo is often mixed up with its look-alike Cebil
(= Anadenanthera colubrina), which contains 5-HO-DMT and some N,N-DMT and
5-MeO-DMT.
- Phalaris arundinacea (canary grass, reed canary grass)
Photo 1
P. arundinacea looks like common reed - Photo 2
The ligules of P. arundinacea are membranes - Photo 3
The ligules of common reed are hairs - Photo 4
Young, indoor cultivated P. arundinacea - Photo 5
These seeds just germinated
- Phalaris arundinacea (canary grass, reed canary grass)
Photo 1
P. arundinacea looks like common reed - Photo 2
The ligules of P. arundinacea are membranes - Photo 3
The ligules of common reed are hairs - Photo 4
Young, indoor cultivated P. arundinacea - Photo 5
These seeds just germinated - Acacia simplicifolia/A. simplex (tataagia)
Photo
Acacia simplex, native to islands in the Pacific
Ocean, can be found in Fiji, French
Polynesia, New Caledonia, Samoa, Solomon
Islands, Tonga, Vanuatu and Argentina
2 = spp. means several species of the Virola genus. There are approximately 15 Virola DMT sources.