There is no generic equivelent as far as I know. In Canada, the only specifically scheduled analogues are those of amphetamine, and that seems to only apply to whatever-substituted phenyl rings with a 2-aminopropyl group attached somewhere (the beta substituted amphetamines, like cathinone, appear outside the list of general controlled amphetamines).
From what you I can gather, all amphetamines, psychedelic or otherwise, hold the possibility of being prosecuted. It's also possible that other phenalkylamines could be targetted if the law is interpretted creatively. As far as tryptamines go, there doesn't seem to be any laws pertaining to them specifically.
There was a general analogue act that they tried to pass in Canada some time ago (in a bill called C-8) that was pretty much equivelent to or more restrictive than the US Analogue Act, but it ended up being struck down because it was considered to be too vague.