Forensic Entomology

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Forensic Entomologists-What the Blow Fly Saw

Forensic Entomologists can actually use insects to help determine time, cause, and place of death.   Read below and try to determine the time of death

The decomposed corpse of a Marine is found in a rain forest just off the highway in Oahu, Hawaii. By the time entomologist Lee Goff arrived most of the blowflies had come and gone, but many other insects were busy with the body. Goff said, "We had clerid beetles and hide beetles, both of which like their bodies slightly dried. I also found the body of a rove beetle -- it arrives early, but you don't see the larvae until a couple of weeks into decomposition. Then I had a hairy maggot blowfly; this was neat because it takes at least 17 days to emerge, and all I had were empty puparia (shells of pupae)." Goff also found cheese skippers, flies that arrive no later than a week after death. "After a month (cheese skippers) pop off the corpse to pupate on the soil. So the fact that I find larvae means we are under 34 days." Finally, Goff found soldier flies. "This one's pretty definitive for my time estimate because they let the body age for about 20 days before coming in. And the ones I collected were fifth instars, between 9 and 11 days old."

Print the timeline below, so that you can write in the answer.

 Type of Insect

 When they arrive/leave

 Hairy maggot blowfliesBlowfly

 

 Cheese skippersskipper pupa

 

 

Soldier flies

 

Solve the Mystery Can you figure out when the marine died?

The quotes and information above are from an article, by Jessica Snyder Sachs, titled "Maggot for the Prosecution," in the November, 1998, Discover magazine. For more information on this topic, visit the Forensic Entomology website.