Musca domestica (Linnaeus, 1758) (Diptera: Muscidae), popularly known as "housefly", is a highly synanthropic species, with economic, medical-sanitary, veterinary, and forensic importance. It is able to cause damage to health, transmit pathogenic agents, cause infection in domestic animals, and, in its immature stage, cause secondary myiasis. The scavenging habit of its immature stages makes these flies pioneers in colonizing both human and animal carcasses, from the initial stages of corpse decomposition to the final stages. Intrapuparial development studies of all stages of the biological cycle of these insects help estimate pupal age, being useful to forensic entomology to aid in determining the minimum postmortem interval (minPMI). This study describes, morphologically, the external structures of the pupae, under temperatures of 23, 27, and 30 ± 1 °C aiming to identify the characteristics that define their developmental stages and estimation of the pupae age of M. domestica. The whole experiment was carried out under laboratory conditions, with relative humidity 60 ± 10% and 12 hours of photoperiod. The process of pupariation and pupation including pre-pupae phases were observed; larvae pupae apolysis; early cryptocephalic pupae; late cryptocephalic pupae; phanerocephalic pupae; pharate adult, discriminated by eye color (transparent eyes, pink eyes, and red eyes); and the emergency of adults, which occurred in the intervals of 162-180; 138-144, and 96-102 hr, respectively, being described throughout the metamorphosis of the external morphological characteristics of the pupal stage of M. domestica.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jme/tjad147 | DOI Listing |
J Med Entomol
January 2025
Department of Forensic Medicine, Soochow University, Ganjiang East Road, Suzhou 215000, China.
Phormia regina (Meigen, 1826; Diptera: Calliphoridae) is a Holarctic species that rapidly colonizes carcasses and has been used as an indicator for determining the minimum postmortem interval. However, studies using morphological methods to estimate the intrapuparial age of P. regina are lacking.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMed Vet Entomol
August 2024
Goethe-University Frankfurt, University Hospital, Institute of Legal Medicine, Frankfurt am Main, Germany.
Estimating the age of immature blow flies is of great importance for forensic entomology. However, no gold-standard technique for an accurate determination of the intra-puparial age has yet been established. Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy is a method to (bio-)chemically characterise material based on the absorbance of electromagnetic energy by functional groups of molecules.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHeliyon
July 2024
School of Basic Medical Sciences, Central South University, Changsha, Hunan, China.
Background: The expression profiles of differentially expressed genes (DEGs) during pupal development have been demonstrated to be vital in age estimation of forensic entomological study. Here, using forensically important (Diptera: Calliphoridae), we aimed to explore the potential of intrapuparial stage aging and postmortem interval (PMI) estimation based on characterization of successive developmental transcriptomes and gene expression patterns.
Methods: We collected pupae at 11 successive intrapuparial stages at 20 °C and used the RNA-seq technique to build the transcriptome profiles of their intrapuparial stages.
Sci Rep
July 2024
Laboratório Integrado: Simulídeos e Oncocercose & Entomologia Médica e Forense (LSOEMF), Instituto Oswaldo Cruz - Fundação Oswaldo Cruz (IOC/FIOCRUZ), Pavilhão Herman Lent - Avenida Brasil, 4365, Manguinhos, RJ, 21040-360, Brazil.
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!