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Published in: International Journal of Legal Medicine 6/2006

01-11-2006 | Case Report

Fly pupae and puparia as potential contaminants of forensic entomology samples from sites of body discovery

Authors: M. S. Archer, M. A. Elgar, C. A. Briggs, D. L. Ranson

Published in: International Journal of Legal Medicine | Issue 6/2006

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Abstract

Fly pupae and puparia may contaminate forensic entomology samples at death scenes if they have originated not from human remains but from animal carcasses or other decomposing organic material. These contaminants may erroneously lengthen post-mortem interval estimates if no pupae or puparia are genuinely associated with the body. Three forensic entomology case studies are presented, in which contamination either occurred or was suspected. In the first case, blow fly puparia collected near the body were detected as contaminants because the species was inactive both when the body was found and when the deceased was last sighted reliably. The second case illustrates that contamination may be suspected at particularly squalid death scenes because of the likely presence of carcasses or organic material. The third case involves the presence at the body discovery site of numerous potentially contaminating animal carcasses. Soil samples were taken along transects to show that pupae and puparia were clustered around their probable sources.
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Metadata
Title
Fly pupae and puparia as potential contaminants of forensic entomology samples from sites of body discovery
Authors
M. S. Archer
M. A. Elgar
C. A. Briggs
D. L. Ranson
Publication date
01-11-2006
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
International Journal of Legal Medicine / Issue 6/2006
Print ISSN: 0937-9827
Electronic ISSN: 1437-1596
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00414-005-0046-x

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