CN(C)CCC1=CNC2=C1C=C(C=C2)OC The pharmacological targets through which this compound exerts its effects.
Living organisms in which this compound is naturally found.

Tree native to the Caribbean and northern South America whose seeds contain a powerful mix of bufotenine, DMT, and 5-MeO-DMT. The seeds are roasted and ground into the snuff known as yopo, used in shamanic ceremonies of the Orinoco basin.

Large toad native to the Sonoran Desert whose parotoid glands contain significant amounts of 5-MeO-DMT and bufotenine.

Widespread temperate grass with extremely variable alkaloid chemistry — depending on the strain and growing conditions, it can produce N,N-DMT, 5-MeO-DMT, bufotenine, and the toxic gramine in differing ratios.

Small flowering shrub of the legume family, native to a broad sweep of tropical and subtropical Asia. Phytochemical surveys have repeatedly shown its leaves and roots to contain a striking combination of psychoactive tryptamines — N,N-DMT, 5-MeO-DMT, and bufotenine — alongside β-carboline alkaloids of the harmala family, making it one of the very few single plants to carry both halves of the ayahuasca formula in the same organism.

Tall Amazonian rainforest tree whose red resin is processed into a powerful DMT-rich snuff used by Yanomami, Tukano, and several other northwest-Amazonian peoples.
- Davis 1987
- Recent clinical research



