A number of fascinating new species of Psilocybe fungi have been reported from Southern Africa in the last few years. These include P. natalensis, P. ingeli, P. maluti, and the provisionally named P. ochraceocentrata. Notably, the latter two species have recently been documented in ceremonial usage for purposes of healing and divination by different traditional cutlural groups in the region.
Psilocybe maluti is a dung-loving species related to the familiar Psilocybe cubensis. It was observed fruiting from bovine dung in pastureland in 2021, being recorded from Free State in South Africa and the neighbouring Kingdom of Lesotho. P. ochraceocentrata is another dung-loving species that has been observed growing in woodland in South Africa and Zimbabwe. It bears a closer resemblance to P. cubensis in appearance than P. maluti, being its closest living relative.
Psilocybe ingeli is another interesting species that was found in manure-enriched pastureland in 2023 in the KwaZulu-Natal region, in a habitat and location that it shares with Psilocybe natalensis. It was first noted in the wild by citizen mycologist Talan Moult, who noticed two mushrooms growing through the grass while clearing a plot for his beehives. He suspected it to be a Psilocybe of some kind and noted a strong indigo blueing reaction when it was bruised. He collected samples and submitted them for genetic analysis, with DNA sequencing indicating it to be a new species to science (it being named after the Ingeli mountain range, where it was first found).
These findings were published in the journal Mycologia, the result of a collaboration between citizen mycologists and academics from Stellenbosch University.
The Vital Role of Citizen Mycologists
The scientific documentation of these species and their usage by traditional cultural groups in the region was largely underpinned by the efforts of knowledgeable amateur citizen mycologists, who collected samples of these species in the field and submitted them for genetic analysis. A single researcher would only be able to cover a fraction of the ground that such committed fungal fans can cover.

Fungi are a highly underrepresented group scientifically, with very few professional mycologists in relation to the incredibly rich diversity of the fungal kingdom, or the mycological richness of Africa in particular. This lack of scientific oversight is compounded in locations like Africa, which are heavily under-surveyed for fungi. This would make scientific work in such locations very difficult without teaming up with local citizen scientists who are the experts of their environment.
Spore Dispersal of Psilocybe Maluti
Reflections on Indigenous and Traditional Cultural Usage of Psilocybe Mushrooms
This is an expanding frontier of knowledge, but it appears that use of Psilocybe fungi is likely quite widespread among traditional cultural communities in Southern Africa. The ways in which the mushrooms are used – and the reasons for their use – in the Southern African traditional cultural context are quite varied and also distinct when comparing such usage to that of Indigenous Mexican groups such as the Mazatec, Mixtec, and Zapotec.

In a Mazatec context, mushrooms are principally used ritualistically to diagnose or alleviate illness, ascertain the whereabouts of a person or lost or stolen objects, or to seek guidance concerning a particular problem or difficulty. In the Bathoso context, the mushrooms are ingested by those seeking insight into spiritual questions, with the answers provided by the healer through interpreting the mushroom imbiber’s visions. The Xhosa use mushrooms as a tonic and ritualistically as a means to connect with their ancestors, seeking insight and guidance. While the ritualistic elements and manner in which the mushrooms are used vary significantly between these different groups, one commonality shared between them is that the mushroom is used as a pathway to insight and guidance.

Other commonalities shared by these different groups on both sides of the Atlantic are the degree of reverence with which the mushrooms are held and that such usage appears to be waning. Knowledge of mushroom lore is largely carried by the elders, with young people departing rural communities and heading to cities in search of work and the perceived perks of a more Western lifestyle. This means that such practices are at risk of dying out, which may partly inspire a greater openness to share knowledge of mushroom lore with outsiders in some instances.
The Tangled Taxonomic Backstory of Psilocybe Ochraceocentrata and Psilocybe Natalensis
The Potential of Psilocybe Ingeli
Psilocybe ingeli is a very interesting species in its own right. While no traditional cultural group in South Africa has (yet) been documented using this species, it is highly potent, easy to cultivate, and grows quickly. Analyses of the dried mushrooms have revealed it to be of high potency, indicating alkaloid levels ranging from 2.3% to 3.2%. This makes it a generally far more potent species than the commonly cultivated P. cubensis.

While P. cubensis can attain such potency levels on occasion, this is the result of decades of strain selection work, after spores of this species made their way into cultivation circles from the Colombian Amazon via the McKenna brothers half a century ago. P. cubensis has hogged the limelight in the cultivator community over this time, being the go-to species to grow, due to the ease of its cultivation and its ability to reliably produce bountiful flushes of mushrooms. However, there appears to be a growing interest in other species of mushrooms.
To put the potency of P. ingeli into context, most clinical studies involving psilocybin use a (high) dose of 25mg of the pure compound. At these potency levels, this means that a gram of dried mushroom material could harbour this dosage of psilocybin (or more), so newcomers to this mushroom should dose with caution (and perhaps not exceed a dosage of 0.5g of dried mushroom material for a first-time experience). Like all psilocybin mushrooms, potency can vary widely, as can individual sensitivities. One way of accounting for potency variation is to powder the dried mushrooms from a given flush and encapsulate them, which should provide a more consistent form of dosing.
Generally speaking, more potent species of mushrooms seem to be held in higher regard. Some people report more body load issues when ingesting less potent species, such as P. cubensis, which require the consumption of larger amounts of fungal matter, with the option of lighter fungal dining being appealing to some.
P. ingeli is a member of Section Zapotecorum. Other related species that are part of this same group include P. zapotecorum and P. subtropicalis, which are held in high shamanic esteem by Indigenous groups in Mexico. However, these species take a while to grow, shifting into slow motion when fruiting (if using P. cubensis as a reference), and they can be more challenging species to cultivate than P. ingeli. P. ingeli is a fast fruiter compared to these species, fruiting on a similar timeframe to P. cubensis, with the added bonus that it is easier to take spore prints from than these other Section Zapotecorum species can be.

P. ingeli has been described as “basically Zaps that fruit as fast as cubes and under similar low maintenance conditions” by chemist and researcher Julian Mattucci of Imperial Labs. Given the combination of its various qualities, P. ingeli could be a species of great importance to the psilonaut cultivator community, and beyond.
What Does the Future Hold?
The discovery of these species of African Psilocybes and the documentation of practices involving them heralds the opening of exciting new chapters in both awareness of the ceremonial use of these fungi by traditional cultures and their wider cultivation. The discovery of these fungi highlights the vital role citizen mycologists can play in contributing to expanding the frontiers of knowledge in under-surveyed parts of the world, such as Africa, as well as the great value such work can hold. Who knows what remains to be discovered across this underexplored fungal frontier?





