Buy Psilocybe Semilanceata
The Psilocybe semilanceata, commonly referred to as a freedom cap, is a psychedelic magic mushroom that contains psychoactive psychacybin and baeocystine compounds. It is the most common psilocybin mushroom in the world and, despite its small size, is considered to be moderately active and extremely potent in nature.
A saprobial fungus, Psilocybe seminal, means that nutrients are broken down by organic matter.
Champagne grows on the planet on its own or in groups, usually in fields and pastures. It is often discovered in fields fertilized from sheep or cow dung, although it does not typically grow directly on dung.
psilocybe semilanceata Taxonomy and naming
The species was first described by Elias Magnus Fries as Agaricus semilanceatus in his 1838 work Epicrisis Systematis Mycologici.] Paul Kummer transferred it to Psilocybe in 1871 when he raised many of Fries’s sub-groupings of Agaricus to the level of genus.[4] Panaeolus semilanceatus, named by Jakob Emanuel Lange in both 1936 and 1939 publications, is a synonym.[5][6] According to the taxonomical database MycoBank, several taxa once considered varieties of P. semilanceata are synonymous with the species now known as Psilocybe strictipes:[7] the caerulescens variety described by Pier Andrea Saccardo in 1887 (originally named Agaricus semilanceatus var. coerulescens by Mordecai Cubitt Cooke in 1881),[8] the microspora variety described by Rolf Singer in 1969,[9] and the obtusata variety described by Marcel Bon in 1985.
Microscopic characteristics
In deposit, the spores are a deep reddish purple-brown color. The use of an optical microscope can reveal further details: the spores are oblong when seen in side view, and oblong to oval in frontal view, with dimensions of 10.5–15 by 6.5–8.5 μm. The basidia (spore bearing cells of the hymenium), are 20–31 by 5–9 μm, four-spored, and have clamps at their bases; there are no basidia found on the sterile gill edge.
Be the first to review “Psilocybe Semilanceata”