Interesting indeed. Are the seeds or live plants available through specialty gardening shops or private collections? I did a quick search and mostly found people saying that they'd been seeking the plant for years without success.
That Riba
et al. reference is definitely curious. I'm guessing it's a mistake, and not a trivial one. As far as I can tell, Jordi Riba has never written any papers that mention
Pilocarpus organensis.
A note on the toxic pilocarpine: It hasn't been reported to occur in
P. organensis, but that doesn't mean that it's definitely not present. Early experimenters would do well to be cautious. Be 100% sure of the botanical identity of your specimens, and check for the presence of pilocarpine (e.g. with TLC).
It looks as though Balsam & Voigtländer is the only published report of 5-MeO-DMT from the plant. There may be some unpublished work... in an appendix to Tryptamine Palace, James Oroc says that the leaves contain 0.41% 5-MeO-DMT, and that figure definitely doesn't come from Balsam & Voigtländer. It's either from another analysis, or perhaps a case of mixed-up notes. Can anyone contact Oroc to ask him?
I've pulled out the relevant figures from Balsam & Voigtländer, as far as 5-MeO-DMT content is concerned:
Code:Starting material: 1250 g
Total alkaloids: 13.32 g (1.06%)
5-MeO-DMT picrate: 17.90 g (from 11.74 g of total alkaloids)
And a couple other important numbers for understanding these data:
Code:m.w. 5-MeO-DMT 218.298 g/mol
m.w. 5-MeO-DMT picrate 447.398 g/mol
So the mass of their picrate salt is equivalent to 8.734 g of 5-MeO-DMT free base.
One point I am not clear on... Total alkaloid from the initial extraction was reported as 13.32 g, but the picrate was generated from 11.74 g of the total alkaloid. Based simply on the reported mass of 5-MeO-DMT picrate compared with the starting material, we see a concentration of 0.70% 5-MeO-DMT in the plant. But if we assume that the other 1.58 g of total alkaloid that wasn't salted with picrate contained the same alkaloid mix, then the content would be slightly higher: 0.79%.
Note that these figures are based on two idealized assumptions: that the extraction efficiency was 100%, and that the picrate salting efficiency was 100%. Of course neither of these is true, so the actual 5-MeO-DMT content is probably somewhat higher.
The takehome message: Ott is right. If this is something people can grow outside of South America, this looks like a very promising source of 5-MeO-DMT.