Rivea corymbosa
Synonyms
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Turbina corymbosa (L.)Raf.
Ipomoea corymbosa (L.)Roth
Convolvulus corymbosus L.
Ipomoea burmannii Choisy
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Rivea corymbosa (common synonym:
Turbina corymbosa), is a species of
morning glory plants, native throughout
Latin America from
Mexico in the North to
Peru in the South and widely naturalised elsewhere. It is a
perennial climbing
vine with white flowers, often planted as an
ornamental.
Known to natives of
Mexico as
Ololiuhqui (also spelled
ololiuqui), its seeds, while little known outside of
Mexico, were perhaps the most common
hallucinogenic drug used by the natives.
In
1941,
Richard Evans Schultes first identified ololiuhqui as
Rivea corymbosa and the chemical composition was first described on
August 18,
1960, in a paper by
Dr. Albert Hofmann. The seeds contain
ergoline alkaloids similar in structure to
LSD.
The
Nahuatl word
ololiuhqui means "round thing," and refers to the small, brown, oval seeds of the morning glory, not the plant itself, which is called
coaxihuitl, "snake-plant," in Nahuatl, and
hiedra or
bejicco in the
Spanish language. The seeds, in Spanish, are sometimes called
semilla de la Virgen (little seeds of the
Virgin Mary).