This document provides an overview of forensic entomology including its history, estimation of time since death using insect evidence, insect life cycles, and key insect species involved in corpse investigation. It discusses how the succession of insects colonizing a body can help estimate post-mortem interval. Key points are that blowflies and flesh flies are important in corpse investigation and that morphological features of insects like mouthparts, eyes, antennae and spiracles are used to identify larvae and estimate time since death.
3. HISTORY
ā¢ The importance of insects in crime-scene investigation that in 1235, a training manual on investigating death,
Washing Away of Wrongs, was written by Sung Tzāu. In this early medico-legal book it is recorded that attention paid
by a number of blow ļ¬ies to a particular sickle caused a murderer to confess to murdering a fellow Chinese farm
worker with that sickle.
ā¢ Experiments by Redi (1668), an Italian,
who,usingtheļ¬eshofanumberofdifferentanimalspecies,demonstratedthatlarvae developed from eggs laid by ļ¬ies, and
the work by Linnaeus (1735) developing a system of classiļ¬cation. In so doing, Linnaeus provided a means of insect
identiļ¬cation (including identifying such forensically important ļ¬ies as Calliphora vomitoria Linnaeus). These
developments formed foundations from which determination of the length of the stages in the insectās lifecycle could
be worked out and the indicators of time since death could be developed.
ā¢ The next signiļ¬cant point in the history of forensic entomology resulted from observations and conclusions made by
Megnin (1894). He related eight stages of human decomposition to the succession of insects colonising the body after
death.
ā¢ Research continues to be required in order to establish the accuracy levels of estimates of time since death and to
interpret variation in different biotopes.
ā¢ Buck Ruxton Case
4. ā¢ Forensic Entomologist use information about insect lifecycle and behaviour to help
interpret evidences in legal context relating to both humans and animals.
ā¢ the mandibles and mouthparts. Its most noticeable external features are the eyes,
antennae, and mouthparts. All of these are important characteristics used in the
identification of insects, and sometimes in the determination of sex. The shape of the
compound eyes, their location on the head, and whether or not they touch are all
characters sometimes used in identification.
ā¢ The mouth hooks of larvae often have a distinctive shape and can be used in the
identification of fly larvae to species.
5. ESTIMATION
ā¢ the developmental period is usually shortened as temperature increases, which is
why accurate climatic data are of utmost importance in the calculation and
estimation of the post-mortem interval based on insect evidence.
ā¢ The process of undergoing physical changes from one life stage to the next is known
as metamorphosis. This is accomplished by means of the insect āshedding its skin,ā
or undergoing ecdysis, at certain times as it grows. The old shed skin that is left
behind is called an exuvium.
6. APPLICATIONS
ā¢ Infestation
ā¢ Insects have a role in crime scene investigations on both land and in water.
ā¢ Species that are forensically relevant- blow ļ¬ies, ļ¬esh ļ¬ies, cheese skippers, hide
and skin beetles, rove beetles and clown beetles.
7. FLIES AND TYPES
ā¢ larder beetles (Dermestidae)
ā¢ Moth ļ¬ies (Psychodidae)
ā¢ Scuttle ļ¬ies (Phoridae)
ā¢ Muscid ļ¬ies (Muscidae)
ā¢ Blowļ¬ies (Calliphoridae)
ā¢ Flesh ļ¬ies (Sarcophagidae)
ā¢ ants (Formicidae)
ā¢ Indian Meal Moth (Plodia interpunctella Hubner)
ā¢ The fruit ļ¬y (Drosophila melanogaster Meigen)
8. FEEDING RELATIONSHIP
ā¢ Necrophages, which feed only on the decomposing tissue of the body or body partsā
for example blowļ¬ies, hide beetles and clown beetles.
ā¢ Predators(and parasites) of the necrophagesāfor example rove beetles and ground
beetles.
ā¢ Omnivores that consume both the live insects inhabiting the corpse and the dead
ļ¬esh ā for example ants (Formicidae), and wasps
10. Identifying Flies-In order to interpret a crime scene it is
important to know which insect species have colonised the body
and something about their habits and environmental requirements
ā¢ Insects are invertebrates. They are classiļ¬ed within the Arthopoda but differ from
other arthropods because they have a number of differing features. Insects have a
hardened body case (an exoskeleton) which is split into three distinct regions. These
sections are called:
ā¢ . the head;
ā¢ . the thorax;
ā¢ . and the abdomen.
11. ā¢ The sections have three dimensions, a top(dorsum),an underneath(sternum) and
sides, each of which is a called a pleuron.
ā¢ Thorax is divided into three sections prothorax, the meso thorax and the meta
thorax.
12. ā¢ All insects have six legs (three pairs of jointed legs). Starting at the point nearest to
the body (the proximal region) we have sections called the coxa (plural coxae),
followed by the trochanter (a small section), the femur, tibia and the tarsus (plural
tarsi) and claws.
13. ā¢ The ļ¬rst of the wing veins, vein1,is called the costa. This is a thick, hardened vein
and gives the wing some rigidity for ļ¬ying. The second vein, vein 2, is called the
stem vein or subcosta. The third vein at the proximal (body) point of attachment,
vein 3, is called the radius. The fourth long vein, vein 4, is the media (or medial)
vein. This can be split into four veins as it passes to the wing edge. The ļ¬fth vein,
vein 5, is called the cubitus vein and in some insect species also splits.
14. ā¢ Insects also have a pair of segmented structures on their heads, which are sense
organs (anterio-dorsally positioned). These are the antennae aka āfeelersā.
ā¢ Antennae provide the insect with a means of gaining both chemical (contact chemo-
receptors) and mechanical information (mechanoreceptors over a distance) from its
surroundings.
15. One of the orders of insects
which are forensically relevant
is the order diptera ā the true
or two-winged ļ¬ies.
#Heirarchy
16. Spiracles-
Identifies the larval stage of a
larva
Number of slits present
The distance between tubercles
(projections) plays a role in the
identiļ¬cation of larval species
17. CALLIPHORA VICINA
ā¢ This is a large blowļ¬y, which is between 9 and 11 mm in length.
ā¢ They are very common and associated with human activity and characterized by their loud
buzzing sound.
ā¢ Females can lay up to 500 eggs on decaying meat, and even fresh meat products
ā¢ The front thoracic spiracle is orange in color.. The head is black on top.
ā¢ Front and half of the check is reddish orange.
ā¢ Lower region of face is black.
ā¢ Thorax is black and have a greyish shine
ā¢ The abdomen is blue , silvery chequerboard effect.
ā¢ Basicosta in wing is yellow in color. Fades to yellow brown.
ā¢ Pupae are considerably smaller than the maggot and are dark brown in colour. The adult fly
emerges 2 weeks later.
19. CALLIPHORA VOMITORIA
ā¢ Blue color bottle flies. They have longer life cylcles than the previous species..
ā¢ Basicosta is black in color. As opposed to orange in previous species.
ā¢ The base region of jowl is gingery orange.
ā¢ Spiracle is brown in color.
ā¢ The larvae of these two can be separated at third instar level as the spiracle width
of vomitoria is smaller and separated by great distance.
ā¢ Spiracles .33-.38mm and .23- .28mm
20. LUCILIA SERICATA
ā¢ Called the green bottle fly as the flies in this genus
have all metallic green color.
ā¢ Green bottle flies are smaller, and more variable in size
than blue bottles
ā¢ They have yellow color basicosta.
ā¢ The larvae of Calliphora and Lucilia sericata is that
the oral sclerite in the head skeleton is transparent
and so seems to be absent in larvae of Lucilia sericata.
ā¢ In contrast to blue bottles, green bottle flies are
considered an outdoor species and reliant on warmer
ā¢ They are considered to be less of a nuisance compared
to blue bottle flies and are even used in medicine to
remove necrotic tissue from infected wounds to speed
up the healing process.
21. SARCOPHAGIDAE
ā¢ Flesh fly, opportunistically depositing hatched or hatching maggots instead of eggs on carrion.
ā¢ The adults mostly feed on fluids from animal bodies, nectar, sweet foods, fluids from animal waste
and other organic substances.
ā¢ Looks similar to house fly. Have grey abdomen with black spots and abdominal banding.
ā¢ Have three spikes on thorax and chequerboard abdomen.
ā¢ These are corpse colonizers.
ā¢ Larvae have barrel like shape and spiracles are yellow.
ā¢ Large number of tuberacles.
ā¢ Have red eyes.