Nixing the nightshades: Traditional knowledge of intoxicating members of the Solanaceae among hallucinogenic plant and mushroom users in Slovenia.
Anticholinergic plants of the family Solanaceae have a long history of use as medicines, poisons, and recreational drugs. Though they were the intoxicating substances of choice throughout Europe for centuries, their use for these purposes has declined with the globalisation of other recreational dru...
Main Authors: | Karsten Fatur, Samo Kreft |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
2021-01-01
|
Series: | PLoS ONE |
Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0247688 |
Similar Items
-
Peculiar plants and fantastic fungi: An ethnobotanical study of the use of hallucinogenic plants and mushrooms in Slovenia.
by: Karsten Fatur
Published: (2021-01-01) -
Dung-associated, Potentially Hallucinogenic Mushrooms from Taiwan
by: Yen-Wen Wang, et al.
Published: (2015-12-01) -
Genetic diversity in Calibrachoa pygmaea (Solanaceae): A hawkmoth-pollinated nightshade from the Pampas
by: Geraldo Mäder, et al. -
A revision of the Old World Black Nightshades (Morelloid clade of Solanum L., Solanaceae)
by: Tiina Särkinen, et al.
Published: (2018-07-01) -
Identification programme for poisonous and hallucinogenic mushrooms of interest to forensic science
by: Margot, P. A. J.-L.
Published: (1980)