Literature DB >> 18093066

Collembola of the grave: a cold case history involving arthropods 28 years after death.

Richard W Merritt1, Richard Snider, Joyce L de Jong, M Eric Benbow, Ryan K Kimbirauskas, Rebecca E Kolar.   

Abstract

This report describes a cold case in which a cadaver of a 28-year-old female was exhumed in February 2005 from a cemetery in Battle Creek, Michigan. She had sustained a gunshot wound to the head and was found dead in her home on November 15, 1977. The body of the victim was subsequently embalmed and then buried at a depth of 1.8 m in an unsealed casket that was placed inside an unsealed cement vault. The exhumation yielded thousands of live specimens of a single species of the order Collembola or spring tails, Sinella (Coecobrya) tenebricosa (Entomobryidae). This species is considered to be a "tramp" species, cosmopolitan in the United States and Canada. Due to the ideal environmental conditions at the site, the population of this species underwent growth and development inside the casket for a number of years. Collected with the Collembola were large numbers of Acarina (mites) of the Family Glycyphagidae, and fly puparia, Conicera tibialis Schmitz (Order: Diptera, Family: Phoridae), also known as coffin flies. These invertebrates are sometimes mentioned by forensic investigators as occurring on corpses in graves, but aspects of their life history are rarely described. The species of Collembola that was found surviving and reproducing on this corpse in a casket exhumed after 28 years was the oldest reported grave site occurrence for any collembolan species based on a survey of the literature back to 1898.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 18093066     DOI: 10.1111/j.1556-4029.2007.00568.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Forensic Sci        ISSN: 0022-1198            Impact factor:   1.832


  7 in total

1.  Carcases and mites.

Authors:  Henk R Braig; M Alejandra Perotti
Journal:  Exp Appl Acarol       Date:  2009-07-24       Impact factor: 2.132

2.  Molecular identification of carrion-breeding scuttle flies (Diptera: Phoridae) using COI barcodes.

Authors:  Petra Boehme; Jens Amendt; R Henry L Disney; Richard Zehner
Journal:  Int J Legal Med       Date:  2010-03-02       Impact factor: 2.686

3.  Occurrence of Poecilochirus austroasiaticus (Acari: Parasitidae) in forensic autopsies and its application on postmortem interval estimation.

Authors:  Alejandro González Medina; Lucas González Herrera; M Alejandra Perotti; Gilberto Jiménez Ríos
Journal:  Exp Appl Acarol       Date:  2012-08-23       Impact factor: 2.132

4.  The impact of the decomposition process of shallow graves on soil mite abundance.

Authors:  Jas K Rai; Brian J Pickles; M Alejandra Perotti
Journal:  J Forensic Sci       Date:  2021-10-14       Impact factor: 1.717

5.  Use of necrophagous insects as evidence of cadaver relocation: myth or reality?

Authors:  Damien Charabidze; Matthias Gosselin; Valéry Hedouin
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2017-08-01       Impact factor: 2.984

6.  Comparative analysis of bones, mites, soil chemistry, nematodes and soil micro-eukaryotes from a suspected homicide to estimate the post-mortem interval.

Authors:  Ildikó Szelecz; Sandra Lösch; Christophe V W Seppey; Enrique Lara; David Singer; Franziska Sorge; Joelle Tschui; M Alejandra Perotti; Edward A D Mitchell
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2018-01-08       Impact factor: 4.379

7.  Assemblages of Acari in shallow burials: mites as markers of the burial environment, of the stage of decay and of body-cadaver regions.

Authors:  Jas K Rai; Brian J Pickles; M Alejandra Perotti
Journal:  Exp Appl Acarol       Date:  2021-10-07       Impact factor: 2.132

  7 in total

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