Mescaline, Peyote and San Pedro: Is sustainability important for cacti consumers?

Author:

Engel Liam1ORCID,Barratt Monica23,Ferris Jason4,Puljevic Cheneal4,Winstock Adam5

Affiliation:

1. The Mescaline Garden, Australia

2. School of Global, Urban and Social Studies, RMIT University, Australia

3. National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre, University of New South Wales, Australia

4. Centre for Health Services Research, Faculty of Medicine, The University of Queensland, Australia

5. Institute of Epidemiology and Health Care, University College London, United Kingdom

Abstract

AbstractBackground and AimsBoth Peyote and San Pedro cacti contain mescaline, a classical psychedelic eliciting mystical and visual effects, but only Peyote is a vulnerable species. We sought to address the questions 1; do people who use Peyote substitute with San Pedro, and vice versa, and; 2. how popular is the use of wild harvested mescaline cactus compared with the use of cultivated plants?MethodsData were collected as part of the 2022 Global Drug Survey, a self-report survey distributed internationally in 11 languages. We asked mescaline cacti consumers about consumption practices, preferences and conservation and conducted chi square tests of associations comparing all motivations by preferred mescaline source.ResultsOf participants who reported using mescaline in the last 12 months (N = 284; 73.2% male, 21.8% female, 5.0% other gender; mean age 36.3, SD 12.5), 20.0% reported consuming Peyote collected from native habitats. Of participants specifying Peyote as their preferred source of mescaline, 82.2% had consumed Peyote in the past 12 months. Indigenous cultural traditions (57.8%), availability (40.0%) and environmental sustainability (33.3%) were the most commonly reported motivations for Peyote preference (n = 45), whereas for San Pedro (n = 86), availability (54.7%), potency (45.3%) and indigenous cultural traditions (44.2%) were most the commonly reported San Pedro preference motivations. Price and potency were significantly more likely to be chosen by those preferring San Pedro compared with Peyote. Less than 7% of participants who consumed San Pedro in the past 12 months had consumed San Pedro from native habitats. Of the participants who specified San Pedro as their preferred source of mescaline, 96.5% had consumed San Pedro in past 12 months. San Pedro was the most commonly reported source of mescaline product consumed (56.1%) with Trichocereus bridgesii being the most reported preferred San Pedro species. Mescaline cacti consumed in the last 12 months rarely deviated from mescaline cacti of preference.ConclusionsWild Peyote is not the most popular mescaline source, but consumption of related products remains unsustainable. Promoting San Pedro as a Peyote substitute may act as an intervention to reduce Peyote consumption.

Publisher

Akademiai Kiado Zrt.

Subject

Pharmacology (medical),Biological Psychiatry,Psychiatry and Mental health,Clinical Psychology,Anthropology,Health (social science),Social Psychology

Reference40 articles.

1. The ‘Peyote gardens’ of south Texas: A conservation crisis?;Anderson, E.,1995

2. Sustainable mining, indigenous rights and conservation: Conflict and discourse in Wirikuta/Catorce, San Luis Potosi, Mexico;Boni, A.,2015

3. The cactaceae;Britton, N.,1920

4. Mescaline and the San Pedro cactus ritual: Archaeological and ethnographic evidence in northern Peru;Carod-Artal, F.,2006

5. Toxic amines and alkaloids from Acacia berlandieri;Clement, B.,1997

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