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Laura Guzmán-Dávalos

Departamento de Botánica y Zoología, Universidad de Guadalajara, Zapopan 45147, Mexico.

2 papers in the library · 2 citations · publishing 2025-2026

Papers

Current use of holy mushrooms of the genus Psilocybe in a Zapotec community in Oaxaca, Mexico.

IMA fungus January 1, 2025 Mara Ximena Haro-Luna, Felipe Ruan-Soto, Virginia Ramírez-Cruz et al. 2 citations

The use of Psilocybe zapotecorum, called Hongo Borracho, Hongo Santo, or in Zapotec Ni'to be'ya, for healing and divination continues in the Zapotec community of El Peral, San Antonino El Alto in Oaxaca, but its use is decreasing and the mushrooms are more difficult to find, likely due to changing climatic patterns. Some community members still sell these mushrooms. For the Zapotecs of El Peral, the mushrooms can do whatever is asked of them according to a ritual, and they are aware that outsiders use them recreationally, though they do not oppose it. This is the first formal record of Psilocybe mushroom use among Zapotecs of the Valles Centrales Region.

Chemical Constituents of Psilocybe Sensu Stricto Mushrooms. A 1958 – 2025 Comprehensive Review

Journal of the Mexican Chemical Society July 7, 2026 Aylín R. Tabal-Robles, J. Martin Torres-Valencia, Leticia Romero-Bautista et al.

A review of chemical studies on Psilocybe mushrooms, covering publications from 1958 to 2025, identified at least 50 different metabolites across 32 species. Most metabolites were alkaloids with indole structures, responsible for psychotropic properties, but amino acids, terpenoids, and saccharides were also reported. The genus comprises about 165 hallucinogenic species, yet information on non-alkaloid metabolites remains scarce.