نتایج جستجو برای: forensic entomology

تعداد نتایج: 21962  

2014
Yu-Hoon Kim Sang Eon Shin Chan Seon Ham Seong Yoon Kim Kwang Soo Ko Tae-Ho Jo Gi Hoon Son Seong Hwan Park Juck-Joon Hwang

Identification of insect species is an important task in forensic entomology. For more convenient species identification, the nucleotide sequences of cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI) gene have been widely utilized. We analyzed full-length COI nucleotide sequences of 10 Muscidae and 6 Sarcophagidae fly species collected in Korea. After DNA extraction from collected flies, PCR amplification a...

Journal: :Environmental entomology 2009
Jeffery K Tomberlin Peter H Adler Heidi M Myers

The black soldier fly, Hermetia illucens L., was reared on a grain-based diet at 27, 30, and 36 degrees C. Survival of 4- to 6-d-old larvae to adults averaged 74-97% at 27 and 30 degrees C but was only 0.1% at 36 degrees C. Flies required a mean of approximately 4 d (11%) longer to complete larval and pupal development at 27 degrees C than at 30 degrees C. At 27 and 30 degrees C, females weighe...

Journal: :Journal of medical entomology 2011
A M Tarone C J Picard C Spiegelman D R Foran

Understanding how ecological conditions influence physiological responses is fundamental to forensic entomology. When determining the minimum postmortem interval with blow fly evidence in forensic investigations, using a reliable and accurate model of development is integral. Many published studies vary in results, source populations, and experimental designs. Accordingly, disentangling genetic...

2017
Anna Mądra-Bielewicz Katarzyna Frątczak-Łagiewska Szymon Matuszewski

Despite widely accepted standards for sampling and preservation of insect evidence, unrepresentative samples or improperly preserved evidence are encountered frequently in forensic investigations. Here, we report the results of laboratory studies on the survival of Lucilia sericata and Calliphora vomitoria (Diptera: Calliphoridae) intra-puparial forms in hermetic containers, which were stimulat...

2017
Tawatchai Monum Kabkaew L. Sukontason Pongruk Sribanditmongkol Kom Sukontason Chutharat Samerjai Kwankamol Limsopatham Suttida Suwannayod Tunwadee Klong-klaew Anchalee Wannasan

This is the first study to report Chrysomya pinguis (Walker) and Lucilia porphyrina (Walker) (Diptera: Calliphoridae) as forensically important blow fly species from human cadavers in Thailand, in addition to Chrysomya villeneuvi (Patton) already known in Thailand. In 2016, a fully decomposed body of an unknown adult male was discovered in a high mountainous forest during winter in Chiang Mai p...

Journal: :Journal of medical entomology 2006
Aaron M Tarone David R Foran

Forensic entomologists rely on laboratory growth data to estimate the time of blow fly colonization on human remains. Several data sets exist for the development of the common blow fly Lucilia sericata (Meigen) (Diptera: Calliphoridae), and although they generally describe similar rates of preadult development, all vary. Such differences could be explained by genetic variation, environmental (r...

Journal: :Brazilian journal of biology = Revista brasleira de biologia 2013
K M Mise R C Corrêa L M Almeida

Many arthropod species are associated with carrion and some of them can be used as forensic indicators in murder investigations to estimate the time of death. Different physical conditions of cadavers may influence the fauna and the importance of freezing and thawing is unknown. The present paper sought to survey the Coleoptera species encountered in frozen and fresh rabbit carcasses, at a fore...

2005
K. C. NYSTROM A. GOFF M. LEE GOFF

This paper explores the contribution that applied forensic entomology can make to our understanding of prehistoric mortuary behaviour. Samples of insect remains were recovered from a mummy bundle that has been attributed to the Chachapoya people who occupied the northern highlands of Perú from ca. AD 800 to ca. AD 1532. The insects were identified to the family level and used to create a hypoth...

Journal: :Medical and veterinary entomology 2003
M L Harvey M W Mansell M H Villet I R Dadour

One major aspect of research in forensic entomology is the investigation of molecular techniques for the accurate identification of insects. Studies to date have addressed the corpse fauna of many geographical regions, but generally neglected the southern African calliphorid species. In this study, forensically significant calliphorids from South Africa, Swaziland, Botswana and Zimbabwe and Aus...

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