For hundreds of years, people have been using recreational
drugs as a way to escape the real world. Most people use things they find in
the terrestrial environment; however, the use of Sarpa salpa, or the Salema porgy, as a recreational drug dates back
to Ancient Roman times. Consuming this fish sends people on a trip that is
believed to be very similar to that of LSD. This fish can be found along the western
coast of Africa, and as far north as Great Britain. With this small range
compared to the size of the world, reported encounters are few and far between.
Sarpa
salpa is not just a delight
to the palate, but it has the ability to send you on a psychedelic trip if you
are one of the lucky.
So, what’s
the catch? (get it?) It’s called ichthyoallyeinotoxism, or fish-borne
intoxication. The dimethyltryptamine, or
DMT, found in the fish would bring the users to have a “spiritual relationship
with a higher being” (Staff 2015-2017). The initial effects of consuming the
DMT allow the users to obtain their high and have increased concentration,
where the side effects afterwards can leave the user with nightmares that could
last a grueling few hours or for days at a time (De Haro 1998). With it being
used across many regions for various activities, it raises the question if
there is a cultural significance to this fish. Are indigenous peoples from
these areas the ones who can hold the answers to many researcher’s unanswered
questions? Only further studies and investigations will show.
Salema Porgy, Sarpa salpa.
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Pflanzio.com
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The Sarpa salpa
gets its nickname “Dream Fish” and in Arabic “the fish that makes dreams” because
of the hallucinogenic tendencies when the fish is ingested. The people who have
been brave enough to try are rumored to have had very realistic hallucinations
(visual and auditory) along with nausea, nightmares, vertigo, decreased motor
function and multiple other side effects that brought about by disturbances to
the central nervous system of the consumer (Blazeski 2016). This type of
reaction is known as the ichthyoallyeinotoxism phenomenon, which is a type of
food poisoning. The Sarpa salpa is
not the only fish that causes this reaction. It can be caused by various fish
found in the tropics whose ingestion also bring about the LSD type trip. Though
there are very few reported encounters, it is said that these hallucinations
are much more like nightmares. One report from 1994 says that after eating
backed Dream Fish on a vacation in the French Riviera, a man experienced
nausea, vomiting, blurred vision, and muscle weakness. He was so afraid of his
hallucinations of screaming animals that he didn’t think he could drive. 36
hours later, he was fully recovered. Another report says a 90-year-old man was
afraid to take himself to the hospital after hallucinating screaming humans and
squawking birds and nightmares for 2 nights, for he thought it was just a
mental illness. Thankfully, after a couple days the hallucinations and
nightmares stopped (De Haro & Pommier 2006).
You may be
wondering what exactly causes these side-effects to occur. Researchers are not
exactly certain, but it is assumed that it can be based purely on the Sarpa salpa’s diet. Part of the fish’s
diet is a macroalgae, Caulerpa prolifer,
and a seagrass, Posidonia oceania. Christian
Rätsch, a German anthropologist, believes that the seagrass and macroalgae are
carriers of DMT, which is a tryptamine also found in LSD. It is also believed
that what part of the fish that is consumed and what time of year can determine
if the consumer will experience these side effects. A study showed that certain
body parts, like the head, can contain more toxins compared to other parts. The
same study suggests that the fall season is when toxins are highest, but most
of the reports are from the spring in summer. With this contrast, the information
may not be useful in determining if seasons have an effect on toxicity levels
in the fish.
The
Dreamfish, though quite normal looking in color and shape, can leave the
consumer with quite an abnormal experience. Through toxins that very well may
be from the fish’s diet, the time of year, or the body part eaten, the
Dreamfish has the ability to give the consumer a high that is very similar to
that of LSD. The nightmarish type hallucinations and extreme side effects can
leave the consumer in quite a state of distress. This fish-borne intoxication typically occurs
in remote areas with few medical facilities.
From ancient times to present times, the Sarpa salpa has been taking its victims on the fishing trip of a
lifetime.
References
Aligizaki, K.,
and G. Nikolaidis. 2008. Morphological identification of two tropical
dinoflagellates of the genera Gambierdiscus and Sinophysis in the Mediterranean
Sea. Journal of Biological Research -
Thessaloniki 9:75–82.
Blazeski, G.
2016. Sarpa salpa is a hallucinogenic fish that was used as a recreational drug
in the Roman Empire. The Vintage News. Available: https://www.thevintagenews.com/2016/10/16/sarpa-salpa-is-a-hallucinogenic-fish-that-was-used-as-a-recreational-drug-in-the-roman-empire/
. (March 2018)
Owen, J. B. 2014.
The Salema Porgy, Hallucinogenic Delight of The Roman Empire. The Scuttlefish.
Available: http://thescuttlefish.com/2014/10/the-salema-porgy-hallucinogenic-delight-of-the-roman-empire/
. (March 2018)
de Haro, L., N.
Prost, J. Arditti, J. M. David, and J. Jouglard. 1998. Ichthyoallyeinotoxism: a
rare pathology. Marseille Poison Centre Experience and literature. Toxicon 36(12):1738–1739.
de Haro, L. D.,
and P. Pommier. 2006. Hallucinatory Fish Poisoning (Ichthyoallyeinotoxism): Two
Case Reports From the Western Mediterranean and Literature Review. Clinical Toxicology 44(2):185–188.
Doochin, D. 2016.
Meet the Hallucinogenic Fish That Can Give You LSD-Esque Nightmares. Atlas
Obscura. Available: https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/meet-the-hallucinogenic-fish-that-can-give-you-lsdesque-nightmares
. (March 2018)
Staff. 2015-2017.
DMT Addiction and Recovery Facts. Recovery.org. Available: https://www.recovery.org/topics/dmt-facts/
. (March 2018)
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