Wood-loving magic mushrooms from Australia are saprotrophic invaders in the northern hemisphere
November 17, 2023 Alistair R. Mctaggart, Kelly Scarlett, Jason C. Slot et al. 2 citations
Psilocybe subaeruginosa, a wood-degrading magic mushroom that produces the psychedelic compound psilocybin, is structured by geography across its Australian range, but geographically separated populations remain fully sexually compatible. Genetic analyses of 89 isolates show that allelic diversity at mating compatibility and psilocybin loci likely results from genetic drift and minimal gene flow since divergence from a common ancestor. Movement of woodchips, mulch, or plants has probably spread genotypes locally within Australia and to the northern hemisphere. Northern-hemisphere species P. azurescens and P. cyanescens cluster among Australian populations, suggesting they are the same species as P. subaeruginosa, whose centre of origin is Australasia. High allelic diversity occurs in psilocybin pathway genes, with some haplotypes carrying one or two putatively functional copies of psiH, though the duplication's functionality remains unknown.