Doctoral Degrees (Zoology and Entomology)
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Browsing Doctoral Degrees (Zoology and Entomology) by Subject "Arthropod succession"
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Item Open Access Forensic entomology: the influence of the burning of a body on insect succession and calculation of the postmortem interval(University of the Free State, 2009) Kolver, Jacobus Hendrik; Van der Linde, Theunis C.Forensic entomology is the application of the study of insects and other arthropods which are associated with legal issues and certain suspected criminal events. Successional studies have been successfully applied in criminal cases to determine the postmortem interval (PMI). This research was done to establish the influence of burning on a body’s decomposition, insect succession and calculation of the PMI. Field trials were conducted during different seasons of successive years on the campus of the University of the Free State, Bloemfontein, South Africa. The experimental site where the field experiments were conducted, consists of 24 hectares of open grassveld with a few scattered trees. Four pig (Sus scrofa) carcasses were used during each trial, one carcass as control and three carcasses burnt with different volumes of LRP petrol to a CGS level 2 or 3 burn injury with varying degrees of charring. The carcasses were sampled daily for arthropod activity, carcass mass, decompositional stage and microclimate. The control and SB (slightly burnt) carcasses decomposed at a similar rate during the warmer seasons. During the colder seasons, the SB carcass decomposed faster than the control carcass. The slowest decomposition occurred at the MB (medium burnt) and HB (heavily burnt) carcasses. Burning had an effect on the colonisation of Chrysomya chloropyga, Chrysomya marginalis and Chrysomya albiceps. Oviposition occurred simultaneously at all carcasses (autumn, spring & during heavy rainfall in summer ), at the burnt carcasses one day prior to the control carcass (spring & summer) and at the burnt carcasses three to five days prior to the control carcass (autumn & winter). An exception occurred during a single trial when oviposition occurred at the burnt carcasses five days after oviposition at the control carcass (winter). During the warmer seasons oviposition time was shorter, resulting in maggots of similar age at all of the carcasses. During the colder seasons oviposition time was extended, resulting in maggots of different ages and instars on the same carcass and between carcasses. During all trials, except for the summer trail with heavy prolonged rainfall, only the control carcasses reached the Dry/Remains Stage. The burnt carcasses only reached the Advanced Decomposition Stage during the same timeframe. Calliphoridae were the dominant Diptera during all trials. Dominant Diptera species, in numerical order, were Chrysomya marginalis, Chrysomya albiceps and Chrysomya chloropyga. Muscidae adults were recorded during all trials, but no maggots were observed or collected. Coleoptera were dominated by Dermestes maculatus (adults and larvae) and Necrobia rufipes (adults). Coleoptera dominance increased with the level of burning. Differences in arthropod succession between the carcasses occurred due to the effect of burning on the time of oviposition. The PMI calculated for a burnt body would be one to five days shorter than the PMI for an unburnt body, depending on the extent of bloating of the burnt body, the season and ambient temperature. During warmer months the PMI of a burnt body and an unburnt body would essentially be the same due to simultaneous oviposition. Laboratory trials revealed that feeding on burnt media caused C. chloropyga maggots to reach pupation one day faster than the control. No significant difference was found between the treatments for the development time from pupation until adult eclosion. No significant difference was found between the treatments for the mean total development time for C. chloropyga. A 10.6% higher survival until adulthood was found on the burnt media than the control. Morphometrics revealed a higher pupal mass for the control than the burnt media. No signifant difference was found for the adult dry mass and wing length for the control and the burnt media.Item Open Access The influence of clothing, wrapping and physical trauma on carcass decomposition and arthropod succession in central South Africa(University of the Free State, 2006-06) Kelly, Janine Anne; Van der Linde, Theuns C.; Anderson, Gail S.English: Forensic entomology is the study of arthropods associated with bodies. Arthropod successional studies have been successfully used to estimate a postmortem interval. This research was to determine the influence of a) seasons, b) clothing, c) wrapping and d) knife wounds on carcass decomposition and arthropod succession. The experimental site consisted of a 26 hectares grass field interspersed with trees. For the wrapped trials, six pig (Sus scrofa) carcasses were divided into three sample groups, each with a clothed carcass and an unclothed carcass wrapped in sheeting. Arthropod sampling was done (i) daily, (ii) five day intervals and (iii) ten day intervals. Two additional unwrapped carcasses, one with clothes and one without, were sampled daily as controls. For the wounds trials six carcasses were divided into three groups. Each group consisted of a carcass with clothes and one without clothes. The wounds consisted of (i) a knife wound to the throat, (ii) three deep knife wounds, in the back, in the front thoracic and in the front abdominal region. The controls, were without any wounds. Oviposition occurred simultaneously and was not delayed or hastened by the presence of wrapping, clothing or wounds. However, during the winter wrapped trials there was a delay of four days. In winter, the carcasses remained acceptable to Diptera for oviposition over an extended period. Oviposition continued up to two months after placement, whilst in the warmer seasons oviposition occurred within the first few days. The Diptera did not select the wounds as oviposition sites. Calliphoridae and Sacrophagidae were the dominant Diptera recorded during all the trials. In the autumn and summer seasons Chrysomya marginalis and Chrysomya albiceps were the dominant species. In the spring seasons, the dominant species were Chrysomya chloropyga and C. albiceps. In the winter seasons, Sarcophaga cruentata , C. chloropyga, Calliphora vicina, and Lucilia spp. were the species breeding on the carcasses. Muscidae adults were present during all the seasons, but no maggots of this family were recorded. Due to the short oviposition time during warmer seasons, the maggots were of a similar age at any time. Due to the extended oviposition that occurred during winter, different instar groups, often the same species, were present at any time. In all seasons the Coleoptera community present on the carcasses were dominated by Dermestes maculatus (adults and larvae) and Necrobia rufipes. In the summer Thanatophilus micans (adults and larvae) and Histeridae spp. were also recorded on the carcasses. There was no overall difference in arthropod succession between any of the carcasses. During the autumn seasons, noticeable predation by C. albiceps maggots on C. marginalis maggots was observed. There was limited maggot predation during the spring trials and some predation observed during the summer trials. Presence of clothing, wrapping and wounds had no influence the Coleoptera community. In the winter seasons, D. maculatus larvae were found while the maggots were still present on the carcasses. In summer seasons, they were only present after maggot migration. Significant maggot mortality was associated with the wrapped carcasses during the warmer seasons. The presence of the sheets or clothing did allow the maggots to move more freely on the surface of the carcasses, especially in the summer. Less skin remained on the wrapped or clothed carcasses after the maggots migrated to pupate.