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Taxonomy- Archaea (Archaebacteria)
Primitive extremophilic prokaryotes - Eubacteria (Bacteria)
Single-celled organisms without membrane-bound organelles - Eukaryota (Eukaryotes)
Organisms with cells containing membrane-bound organelles- Fungi (Fungi)
Absorptive heterotrophs with chitin cell walls. - Metazoa (Animals)
Multicellular heterotrophic eukaryotes - Plantae (Plants)
Multicellular photosynthetic eukaryotes with cellulose cell walls- Tracheophyta (Vascular plants)
- Angiospermae (Flowering plants)
- Dicotyledonae (Dicots)
Plants with a dual seed leaf- Apialies
- Aquifoliales
- Asterales
- Asteraceae (Compositae)
- Anthemideae
- Asteroideae
- Artemisia
- Artemisia abrotanum (Southernwood, southern wormwood)
- Artemisia absinthium (Wormwood)
- Artemisia caerulescens
- Artemisia carruthii (Carruth's sagewort)
- Artemisia cina (Levant, Santonica, Sea Wormwood, Wormseed)
- Artemisia copa
- Artemisia dracunculus (Dragon sage-wort, dragon wormwood, estragon, false tarragon)
- Artemisia dubia
- Artemisia frigida (Fringed sagebrush, prairie sagewort, pasture sagebrush, little sage, mountain sage)
- Artemisia indica (Indian sagebrush)
- Artemisia ludoviciana (White sage)
- Artemisia nilagirica
- Artemisia tilesii (Tilesius' wormwood)
- Artemisia tridentata (Basin big sagebrush)
- Artemisia vulgaris (Mugwort)
- Chamaemelum
- Calea
- Lactuceae
- Tagetes (Marigolds)
- Tagetes erecta (African marigold)
- Tagetes lucida (Spanish tarragon, Mexican mint marigold, Mexican tarragon)
sometimes added to Nicotiana rustica as a Huichol smoking mixture
- Campanulaceae
- Goodeniaceae
- Brassicales
- Caryophyllales
- Celastraceae
- Columelliaceae
- Cucurbitales
- Dipsacales
- Ericales
- Fabales
- Fabaceae (Leguminosae) (Legumes)
- Caesalpinoideae
- Mimosoideae
mainly tropical- Acacia (Waddles)
There are over 750 species of Acacia in Australia along. Many species contain tryptamines- Acacia acuminata (Mangard, Raspberry-Jam Tree)
Small tree or shrub up to 40 foot tall - Acacia auriculiformis (Ear Pod Wattle)
Fast growing small tree to 95 foot with 8 inch leaves and yellow flowers and twisted fruit pods. - Acacia baileyana (Cootamundra Wattle)
Shrub/small tree to 8m with fragrant yellow flowers in the spring and glaucous pinnate foliage. - Acacia complanata
Shrub from Australia containing MAOI's - Acacia cultriformis (Knifeleaf Wattle)
A drought resistant bushy shrub growing to a little over 13 feet tall, and as wide. Contains tryptamines and phethylamnies - Acacia farnesiana (Mimosa Bush, Huisache, Prickly Moses)
Straggly, many-branched shrub to 3 m high. Spiny stems with bipinnate leaves to 5 cm long. Golden ball-flowers are strongly perfumed. - Acacia floribunda (Sally Wattle, Gossamer Wattle, White sallow wattle)
Tall, bushy shrub or small tree to 6 m. Phyllodes linear to narrow elliptical to 10 cm long. Bears cream flowers in rods to 4 cm long in early spring. Reported to contain tryptamine & phenethylamines - Acacia implexa (Lightwood, Hickory Wattle)
Small to medium-sized tree to 12 m high with light green, sickle-shaped phyllodes to 20 cm. Bears cream ball-shaped flowers in summer. - Acacia longifolia (Sydney golden wattle, golden wattle, long-leaved wattle, long-leaved acacia, sallow wattle, coast wattle, golden rods)
Australian acacia which has shown to contain DMT - Acacia maidenii (Maiden's wattle)
- Acacia phlebophylla (Buffalo sallow wattle)
Leaves are a good source of DMT
- Anadenanthera
Genus of trees, a few species of which bear seeds used to make DMT-containing snuffs. - Desmanthus
- Mimosa
- Pithecellobium
- Papilionoideae
Tropical and temperate
- Polygalaceae
- Gentianales
- Lamiales
- Magnoliophyta
- Malpighiales
- Malvales
- Myrtales
- Piperales
- Ranales
- Myristaceae
Tropical family of ~12 genera and ~300 species of trees.- Myristica
Genus of Old World tropical trees. - Virola (epená, paricá, nyakwana)
Genus of ~60 New World tropical trees. The bark of certain species are used to prepare a DMT-containing snuff.
- Ranunculales
- Menispermaceae
- Abuta
- Abuta grandifolia (Quaymitu (Quechua), Caymitillo, Sanango, Soga, Tropetero)
Bark used as Peruvian ayahuasca ingredient, dart poison and headache remedy
- Papaveraceae
- Ranunculaceae
- Aconitum
Widespread genus whose members have been used as a poison and inebriant in many parts of the world.- Aconitum napellus (Aconite, wolf's bane, monkshood)
Poison/inebriant used since antiquity in Europe, including in witches ointments.
- Rosales
- Santalales
- Sapindales
- Nitrariaceae
- Peganum
- Peganum harmala (Syrian rue)
The seeds of this Middle-Eastern shrub have a long history of medical/psychoactive use. Their properties derive from MAO-inhibiting beta-carboline alkaloids, making it usefl as an ayahuasca admixture.
- Rutaceae
- Sapindaceae
- Solanales
- Laurales
- Monocotyledonae (Monocots)
Plants with a single seed leaf
- Filicopsida (Ferns)
- Ginkgoopsida
- Gymnospermae
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