Memorias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz (Sep 2009)

New records of calyptrate dipterans (Fanniidae, Muscidae and Sarcophagidae) associated with the decomposition of domestic pigs in Brazil

  • Rodrigo Rocha Barbosa,
  • Cátia Antunes de Mello-Patiu,
  • Rubens Pinto de Mello,
  • Margareth Maria de Carvalho Queiroz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/S0074-02762009000600018
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 104, no. 6
pp. 923 – 926

Abstract

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The calyptrate dipterans are the most important decomposers of human cadavers. Knowledge of their species and distribution are of great importance to forensic entomology, especially because of the enormous diversity in Brazil. Carcasses of domestic pigs (Sus scrofa, L) were the experimental models used to attract calyptrates of forensic interest during the winters of 2006 and 2007 and the summers of 2006 and 2008. A total of 24,423 specimens from 44 species were collected (19 Muscidae, 2 Fanniidae and 23 Sarcophagidae), three of which were new records of occurrence and 20 of which were new forensic records for the state of Rio de Janeiro. Fourteen of these species were newly identified as forensically important in Brazil.

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