^yes 'new worlds from old' (pic),
wattlez, thanks,
and yes the importance of acacias in human and likely proto-human survival and evolution is vast..it's because of this in part that they are considered sacred in many places..some can survive in the most barren of conditions, and almost all fix the soil (in collaboration with symbiotic co-evolved rhyzobium bacteria)...
as was discovered by some in the evolution of the thread - the study of them as living species in the environment is fascinating and engaging..
(note 'Acacia' this thread includes the new Vachellia, Senegalia, Acaciella etc genuses)
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..i wanted to encourage people to keep contributing new findings here, much has been discovered by the collaborate research at the nexus..
i've said a lot now, and must attend to things...i wanted to offer a little bit more information, towards future research, and mention some of the most
recent findingswhat's noteworthy about the 2 findings i'll highlight are that they are two Australian species, that are widely grown, and escaped, around the world, and in this case the tested plant material was grown or growing outside of Australia..
First up,
Acacia dealbataIt's native to New South Wales, Victoria and Tasmania, and has been introduced to many places world wide incl.: Albania, Argentina, Assam, Azores, Brazil, California, Chile, China, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Ethiopia, France, Guatemala, Haiti, India, Israel, Jamaica, Mauritius, Mozambique, Myanmar, Nepal, New Zealand, Oregon, Palestine, Portugal, Romania, Spain, Sri Lanka, Swaziland, Taiwan, Tanzania, Uganda, Uruguay, and Yugoslavia ..It is a flowers for perfume species, taken out of Australia 200 years ago, and was commonly known in Europe and the US as 'Mimosa', and also 'Cassie'..
Despite being so common, there has not been any previously published identification of alkaloids in any part of the plant
...One recent sample of A. dealbata growing in Portugal has been tested by endlessness for the Nexus and found to contain Bufotenine - the first time it has been found as the sole or primary alkaloid in an acacia (it's been found just a few times usually as traces in conjunction with other primary alkaloids)..the amount was fairly small (0.1%), however this is a single test of one specimen...we know there can be great variance due to sub-type, locality, conditions, season etc..This is a real first for both this species and acacias in general...Given how widespread this species is, it would indicate further research is warranted
A. dealbata is one of the 'bi-pinnate' types of acacias (with many small leaves joining central ribs in fern like foilage)..these have not been widely investigated for alkaloids..some are rich in and grown for tannins, such as
A. mearnsii (which has a few isolated reports of dmt in bark, which need corroborating)...The bi-pinnate
A. baileyana (also very widely grown) was found to contain in the leaves, tryptamines at one time of year, and beta-carbolines at a different time [Shulgin & Shulgin 'Tikhal'; Robert Hegnauer 'Chemotaxonomie der Pflanzen' )
..it's considered invasive in many parts of the world...
Next up,
Acacia retinodes ..now this is an interesting species that has been discussed before..
Native to South Australia and Victoria, and recorded growing in - Cyprus, Ethiopia, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Mauritius, New Zealand, Portugal, Romania, Russia, South Africa, Spain, United Kingdom, & the United States ..the only previous data on it was a report of DMT/NMT from Germany, a question-mark nicotine trace finding (which would have been a good example of why not to orally ingest unknown acacias), and a 0.2% alkaloid unknown (Rovelli 1967) in Aus (which may have been A. provincialis) ..
This species was grown by a bright nexian in the UK, and small amounts of phyllodes and twig at 2 years old were sent to the Nexus to be tested. Only a very crude extract was tested, so we can't be sure of actual % in plant, but i believe the finding in Germany was 0.5%...For the Nexus, endlessness found (from a UK cultivated plant) - DMT as the main alkaloid, with some 2-MTHBC, and small amounts NMT, DMT N-Oxide, Bufotenine.
..sometimes known as 'Swamp Wattle', it is a close relative of
A. provincialis, which was found by one nexian in Bolivia to have contained active entheogenic alkaloids, which were not identified and may have been of an unknown type or class of tryptamine...that was about 12 years ago...
These plants should never be sourced in their native wild populations, and should ethically be cultivated (as this test was)
...
i wanted to add a note to, and on, the academic publishing mainstream science world -
The progress in terms of screening and identifying alkaloids in acacias in the past 30 years has been very slow, especially given the amount of time and resources already invested in plant screening..it's been partly 'political', as indicated by the with-holding of some reports on tryptamines in acacias in Australia for example, or in Africa and Asia probable nervousness around funding grants ...this has resulted in a shift away from published resources as being accurate or up-to-date as far as this sub-branch of knowledge is concerned...A shift towards, first, independent/underground journals such as Entheogen Review in the 90s, and then towards now internet based resources..The latter are often half-cited as 'anonymous internet sources'..in many cases this is true, and the information's reliability cannot be verified..there's no data, and no peer review..
But what many publishing authors have often not taken into account is the nature of a handful of newer resources such as the DMT-Nexus..some researchers here are not all that 'anonymous', some talk at conferences, even if they use pseudonyms..some work at established lab facilities..They can be contacted, and more importantly, in the case of the Nexus
Collaborate Research analysis work - the samples have been kept, as well as the raw data (which is more than can be said for some older accepted papers)..(see also the first edition of the Nexian magazine, for e-publishing)
..i've read some recent papers on acacia alkaloids and tryptamines, who have some good summaries but not a lot new to report...i think they should feel that they can cite the Nexus..it's verifiably reliable, and open to (peer) review of results..Also if they want to get to the sources of 'rumours', they could do well to get in touch with people here..this is living research here, and all the 'noise' is valuable social history
and there is a lot yet to be discovered in this acacian field, with an array of applications and implications
.
Keep the new research, and the information coming in
(and Please be kind to trees)
Be well acacians all...
Pictured: Acacia dealbata growing in a park;
Acacia retinodes in Italy; A. retinodes fleur en france.. ;
and Acacia in the Dunes...
terraforming and the great expansion
@
nen888 attached the following image(s):
Acacia-dealbata_'mimosa'-.jpg
(118kb) downloaded 132 time(s). a retinodes italy 2.jpg
(155kb) downloaded 132 time(s). acacia-retinodes-fleur-.jpg
(111kb) downloaded 132 time(s). acacia-dunes.jpg
(66kb) downloaded 132 time(s).