269 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
269 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
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From: RikM@sv.span.com (Rik Marshall)
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Date: Tue, 11 Oct 1994 07:56:27 +0000
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Newsgroups: alt.drugs
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Subject: Mushroom Identification
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I've decided to go shroom picking this year and recently posted a request
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for information to a.d, this has met with a lot of response (from the UK),
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it seems people are a bit vague on what it looks like, and where to find
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them.
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I've been looking through books and condensed all the relevant info
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into this file (also a couple of gifs).
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The two species I have concentrated on are Psilocybe Semilanceata (Liberty
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Caps) and Amanita Muscaria (Fly Agaric). I have been looking for the first
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(I'm not too bothered about the second, after reading a few posts about it
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in a.d, it sounds a little too heavy, pos. dangerous), the literature seems
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to have the concensus that it is harmless (except for the hallucinogenic
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properties :) ).
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I hope this helps ....
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< Sorry for any typo's >
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-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
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___The mushroom identifier - David Pegler & Brian Spooner___
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Poisonous Fungi
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Some species affect the central nervous system causing hallucinations and
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sometimes leading to coma. In the case of muscimol poisoning, also caused
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by the Fly Agaric (Amanita muscaria) and by others such as The Panther
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(A. pantherina), the symptoms consist mainly of drowsiness but can be more
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serious. Some of the Psiocybe species, on the other hand, cause visual
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hallucinations within 20 minutes of ingestion. Such mushrooms are sometimes
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deliberately ingested for recreational purposesalthough the legality of such
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actions varies between countries.
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Psilocybe Semilanceata (Stropharia (Strophariaceae)) - Liberty Cap.
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A well-known species, owing to its reputation as a "magic mushroom"
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Cap: 3/8-5/8 in(1-1.5cm) in diameter, narrowly conical with a central,
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pointed projection, not expandinhg, pale yellowish brown, drying
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to almost white, smooth, sticky, with a darker striated margin.
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Gills: adnate, grey-brown to blackish brown, broad and crowded.
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Stem: 2-3 X 1/8 in (5-8X0.2-03 cm), slender, cylindrical, paler than the
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cap and often bruising bluish green towards the base.
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Flesh: thin, firm.
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Spore deposit: purplish black.
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Habitat: very common, solitary or in very large numbers, in open grassland.
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Edibility: toxic, causing psychotropic poisoning, and consequently has been
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used as a hallucinogen.
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Season: Autumn
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Similar species: There are numerous species of Psilocybe, and many are small
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and similar in appearance. The Bluing Psilocybe (P. cyanescens)
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lacks a point on the cap, while P. fimetaria grows on dung; both
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poisonous.
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Amanita Muscaria (Amanita (Amanitaceae)) - Fly Agaric.
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Perhaps the best-known wild mushroom, having a large, scarlet cap with small
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white scales, and a membranous ring on the stem.
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Cap: 2-9 in (5-25 cm) in diameter, strongly rounded the expanding to flat
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and platelike, moist and shiny, with concentric rings of small white
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scales which may become washed away by the rain.
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Gills: free, white to pale yellow, broad and rounded.
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Stem: 4-9 X 3/8-1 in (10-25 X 1-2.5 cm), tall, cylindrical with as swollen
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base.
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Flesh: thick, white, yellowish under cap cuticle.
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Spore deposit: white.
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Habitat: in small groups, under pine or birch.
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Edibility: poisonous, containing both sweat-inducing and mild hallucinogenic
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poisons, which can cause delerium and coma.
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Season: Autumn
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Similar species: The variety regalis is yellowish brown with yellow scales,
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and in North America, the variety formosa is orange-yellow; both
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poisonous.
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__The Encyclopedia of Mushrooms - Colin Dickinson & John Lucas__
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Mushroom Poisoning - The nerve poisons.
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Apart from the cell poisons, the most dangerous species are those which
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contain substances that affect the nervous system. Strictly speaking the
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hallucinogenic species also affect the nervous system, but the disturbances
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in this case are usually restricted to sensory distortion. Mushrooms
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containing nerve poisons can cause more serious symptoms such as convulsions,
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irregular breathing and, in severe cases, death through heart failure. Two
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types of toxin have been implicated in this type of poisoning - muscarine
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and ibotenic acid.
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Hallucinogenic mushrooms.
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The principal toxins in Amanita muscaria have now been identified as ibotenic
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acid, and the closely related compound, muscimol. The Panther Cap (A.
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pantherina) causes similar symptoms, also attributed to these poisons but
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while this latter species is rightly regarded as dangerous, the status of
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Fly Agaric as a deadly mushroom has been questioned. It has traditionally
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been used as a ritual halluginogen in certain cultures and attitudes to this
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mushroom would appear to be more to do with cultural background than with any
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scientific assessment of it's toxicity.
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Psilocybe semilanceata - Liberty Caps.
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This small fungus was given the name Liberty Caps because the shape of its
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cap is like that adopted as the symbol of the first French Republic. It
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contains the hallucinatory drug psilocybin, and may have been tried by those
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seeking new drug experiences. In a recent English court case it was judged
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not to be an offence to possess the fruiting bodies of this species.
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Cap: pale clay colour, becoming yellowish-olive or dingy brown. 0.5-1cm in
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diameter, up to 2cm high. Acutely conical, often with a sharp point, never
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exapnding. Margin inrolled at first, slightly striate. Cutcle slimy,
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peeling in wet weather. Flesh membranous, white.
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Gills: finally purplish brown with white edges, adnate, narrow, crowded.
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Stipe: slender, usually wavy, up to 7.5 cm long. Whitish at the top, pale
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clay lower down. Smooth with remnants of viel in young specimins.
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Flesh: pliant, tough.
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Spores: purple-brown in mass, ellipsoid, smooth, with a germ pore, average
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size 13.0 X 7.8 microns.
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Habitat and distribution.
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Grows gregariously, often in troops, among grass, in fields, pastures, heaths
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and along roadsides where animals have grazed. Frequent to common in Europe
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and North America, it also grows in Australia.
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Occurrence: August to November.
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Culinary properties: It is said to be poisonous when raw, even fatal is eaten
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by children. Harmless when cooked.
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__The Illustrated Book of Mushrooms and Fungi - Dr Mirko Svrcek__
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Poisonous fungi and the symptoms of poisoning.
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Psychotropic poisoning involves serious cases characterized by the irritation
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of brain tissue. For a long time the intoxication caused by the Fly Agaric
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was the only form of mushroom poisoning accompanied by psychic disturbances.
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It was not before the 1950s that other so-called cult fungi, formally used in
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religious ceremonies and rites, were identified; their ingestion leads to
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different manifestations of psychic disturbance. Two types of psychotropic
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poisoning are distinguished: psychotonic poisoning caused by the so-called
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mycoatropine, and psychodysleptic poisoning caused by psilocybine.
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In Europe, poisoning by mycoatropine is caused by three Amanita species.
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Most common are cases of poisoning after eating the Panther Cap, less
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frequent are those caused by the Fly Agaric, and practically unknown is
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poisoning by A. regalis. The poisonous content principles of these amanitas
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have not yet been exactly identified, and this is why the designation
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'mycoatrophine poisoning', though inadequate, is still used nowadays.
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The course of poisoning caused by all the three species is substantially the
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same: nausea is experienced between half an hour and three hours after
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consumption, accompanied by vomiting, headache, quickened heartbeat, and a
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persistent dilation of pupils occasionally leading to vision disturbances.
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Often the condition of the affected person resembles alchoholic intoxication:
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the patient becomes talkative, shouts obscenities, sometimes laughs or weeps,
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strikes himself and keeps on running to and fro. The states of excitement
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may be dangerous for the sick person and must therefore be mitigated.
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Subsequently the patient faints, recovers from time to time, hallucinates,
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screams, defends himself against invisable danger, etc, but finally falls
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into a profound sleep from which he usually awakens into a normal state,
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without remembering his previous behaviour. This poisoning comes to it's
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fortunate end on the second or third day. First aid consists in the
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stimulation of vomiting and in taking the patient to hospital; he must be
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given neither milk nor alchohol. The treatment starts with a stomach rinse,
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the excitement is controlled by remidies of the cholpromazine type,
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physostigmne (never atropine!) is administered as an antidote against
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mycoatropine.
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Psilocybine poisoning occurs after consuming some species of the genus
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Psilocybe, or fungi belonging to related genera about which, nowadays,
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abundant literature is available. These fungi are distributed mostly in
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Mexico and in some Central American countries. They contain so-called
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hallucinogenic substances thanks to which they had long been used in
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religious rituals and were kept secret until the twentieth century. Their
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research is due to the efforts of the American ethnographers Mr and Mrs
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Wasson who succeeded in aquiring hallucunogenous fungi, which they studied
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and identified with the help of mycologists. Chemical analysis of these
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fungi were carried out, and it was even possible to cultivate some of them.
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The effecttive substance was finally produced artificially, whereby its
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experimental testing on volunteers and its application for therapeutic
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purposes was made possible.
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Fungi containing hallucinogenic substances generally produce small,
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inconspicuous fruit bodies growing on dung or excrements. They belong to the
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genera Psilocybe, Panaeolus, Panaelina and Stropharia. The amount of
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effective substances in the fruit bodies is variable, particularly in the
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European representatives of the mentioned genera whose effect is
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substantially smaller in comparison with the Mexican species.
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The psychic symptoms following the ingestion of halluginogenic fungi are
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extremely varied. In some individuals they manifest themselves as euphoria,
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in others as sight disorders and hallucinations; saometimes they assume the
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form of the kaleidoscopic effect involving the duplication of objects in
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inappropriate colours; still other persons, on the contrary, feel anxiety
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and fear, suffer from terrifying delusions, and these states may lead to
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delirium and suicide attempts. Thanks to the lower content of effective
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substances, the European fungi evoke much milder symptoms.
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Hallucinogenic fungi contain four active substances; psilocybine, psilocine,
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baeocystine, and norbaeocystine. Psilocine is considered the main bearer of
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halluginogenic proprties. However, poisoning by these fungi is exceptional,
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and there is no danger of misusing European hallucinogenic fungi for
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intentional intoxication.
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Psilocybe semilanceata (Liberty Cap)
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The genus Psilocybe, as well as the related genera Panaeolus and Stropharia,
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have become better known - and especially more popular - following the
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discovery of hallucinogenic substances obtained from numerous Mexican species
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of Psilocybe. Further analyses have also shown that some European species of
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the genus Psilocybe also contain substances with hallucinogenic effects,
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even though in substantially smaller quantities so that the symptoms
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following their ingestion are much milder.
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Psilocybe semilanceata is a very small fungus which easily escapes attention.
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Its cap is 1-2 cm high, always higher than it is wide, markedly and
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persistently lanceolate-pointed or narrowly conical, often with an abruptly
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projecting point, thin-fleshed, hygrophanous, shiny or sticky, dark olive
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grey-brown or yellow-brown when moist, in dry conditions leathery yellow,
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smooth, glabrous, with greenish spots. The stipe is very long, only 2-3mm
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thick, firm and tough, tortuous, pallid or brownish, with a silky sheen,
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often blue-green at the base, attached to the substrate by a bluish green
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mycelium. The gills are broadly adnate, olive grey or brownish with a lilac
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tinge, then red-brown to black-brown, with white ciliate edges. The gill
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edges harbour numerous cheilocystidia. The flesh has no specifiec odour nor
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taste. The spore print is dark brown.
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P. semilanceata grows in grass tufts on pasturelands and forest tracks from
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August to October. It is not particularly abundant and appears more commonly
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in upland regions. It is inedible because of the halluginogenic substances
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it contains.
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1. Amanita muscaria (Fly Agaric)
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The Fly Agaric has been known as a poisonous species since ancient times.
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Its toxicity is mainly due to the presence of mycoatropine which causes
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disorders of mental activity. The content of another poisonous principle,
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muscarine, is relatively small. Recently the identity of the Fly Agaric with
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the drug called 'soma', venerated by the most ancient Aryan tribes in the
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time of migrating to and settling in the mountains of Afghanistan, has been
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established. The migration of peoples contributed to the further spreading
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of the Fly Agaric cult. Particularly remarkable is the Siberian cult of the
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Fly Agaric: people were drinking fruit-body decoctions, chewing dry
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toadstools and washing them down with cold water; or they would prepare a
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beverage from a micture of the toadstool and leaves of the Bog Whortleberry
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nad Salix angustifolia. Since the effective substance is secreted with
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urine, they even drank the urine of intoxicated persons.
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The symptoms of swallowing include vomiting, headache, accelerated heartbeat,
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dilation of pupils; often a state similar to alcoholic intoxication and
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hallucinations set in, and finally the poisoned person awakes in the morning
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in a normal condition, without remembering his or her previous behaviour.
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2. Amanita regalis, growing in upland spruce stands, is distinguished by a
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yellowish-brown cap, a yellowish stipe and similarly coloured remnants of the
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outer veil on the cap, and by a ring. It seems to be as poisonous as the
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Fly agaric.
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-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
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________Rikm@Sv.Span.Com______________________________London_Uk______________
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__|| __^___ \ \ ||__
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__|| It's just a load of / \ \ \ _|\/\/_ |^^^^^^| ||__
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__|| stuff that happens. | | \ ____\ \ /_ | | ||__
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__|| ____ ^^ (o)(o) \ / \ (o)(o) / (o)(o) | ||__
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__|| / ) / / @ .--- | ( (o)(o) /____. @> C | ||__
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__|| /____/ * /_/ | / .____\ | .___\ \ | /____/ @ ||__
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__|| / / / /\ | \____/ | | | | \ | ||__
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__||___/ (___/__/ )____/\_____|________ooooo______oooo_______|___|____||__
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