Histora Entologia II

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     A brief survey of the history of forensic entomology 15

    Acta Biologica Benrodis 14 (2007)

    Acta Biologica Benrodis 14 (2008): 15-38

    A brief survey o f the his tory o f forens ic entomolog y

    Ein kurzer Streifzug durch die Geschichte der forensischen

    Entomologie

    MARK BENECKEInternational Forensic Research &Consulting, Postfach 250411, D-50520 Köln,

    G erma ny; forensic@ benecke.com

    Summary: The fact that insects and other arthropods contribute to the decomposition of corpsesand even may help to solve killings is known for years. In China (13th century) a killer was convicted

    with the help of flies. Artistic contributions, e.g. from the 15th and 16th century, show corpses with“worms”, i.e. maggots. At the end of the 18th and in the beginning of the 19th century forensic doctorspointed out the significance of maggots for decomposition of corpses and soon the hour of death wasdetermined using pupae of flies (Diptera) and larval moths (Lepidoptera) as indicators. In the eightiesof the 19th century, when R EINHARD and HOFMANN documented adult flies (Phoridae) on corpsesduring mass exhumation, case reports began to be replaced by systematic studies and entomologybecame an essential part of forensic medicine and criminology. At nearly the same time the Frencharmy veterinarian MÉGNIN recognized that the colonisation of corpses, namely outside the grave, takesplace in predictable waves; his book “La faune des cadavres” published in 1894 is a mile stone of theforensic entomology. Canadian (JOHNSTON & V ILLENEUVE) and American (MOTTER ) scientists have

    been influenced by MÉGNIN. Since 1895 the former studied forensically important insects on nonburied corpses and in 1896 and 1897 MOTTER  published observations on the fauna of exhumedcorpses, the state of corpses as well as the composition of earth and the time of death of corpses inthe grave. At the end of the 19th and in the beginning of the 20th century the Germans K LINGELHÖFFER and M ASCHKA  as well as the forensic doctor HOROSKIEWICZ from Krakau dealt with alleged childhomicides, including the suspected use of sulphuric acid. In this context, it was shown that ants,cockroaches and freshwater arthropods could produce post-mortem artefacts suggestive of childabuse. These and many other studies laid the foundations for subsequent faunistic surveys, mono-graphs and ecological studies of arthropods important for forensic science and for the developmentof modern, better and better research methods of forensic entomology. Since the 1990’s, forensicentomology is taught and practiced in many countries in all continents and police academies, and

    international trainings for students take place since 2002 on a regular base.

     Forensicentomology, history, post morteminterval, P. M  ÉGNIN , medico-legal useof insects

    Zusammenfassung: Die Tatsache, dass Insekten und andere Arthropoden einen Beitrag zurZersetzung von Leichen leisten können und generell zur Aufklärung von Tötungsdelikten beitragenkönnen, ist lange bekannt. In China konnte im 13. Jahrhundert ein Mord mit Hilfe von Fliegenaufgeklärt werden. Künstlerische Darstellungen, z.B. aus dem 15. und 16. Jahrhundert, zeigenregelmäßig mit „Würmern” (= Maden) befallene Leichen. Ende des 18. und Anfang des 19. Jahr-hunderts wiesen Rechtsmediziner darauf hin, dass Maden einen entscheidenden Beitrag zur Zerset-

    zung von Leichen leisten können, und kurze Zeit später wurde mit Hilfe von Fliegenpuppen(Diptera) und Mottenlarven (Lepidoptera) der Todeszeitpunkt der Leiche bestimmt. Den Schritt von der reinen Fallbetrachtung zur systematischen Untersuchung und Anwendung der Insekten-kunde in der Rechtsmedizin und Kriminalistik vollzogen in den 80iger Jahren des 19. Jahrhundertsder Mediziner R EINHARD und der Naturforscher HOFMANN, die bei Massenexhumierungen auf den

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    16 M ARK  BENECKE

    Leichen erwachsene Buckelfliegen (Phoridae) entdeckten. Etwa zur selben Zeit erkannte MÉGNINin Frankreich, dass die Besiedlung von Leichen – besonders auch außerhalb des Grabes – in vorhersagbaren Wellen abläuft. Sein 1894 erschienenes Buch „La faune des cadavres“ gilt alsMeilenstein der forensischen Entomologie. Seine Konzepte beeinflussten die kanadischen Forscher JOHNSTON & V ILLENEUVE, die seit 1895 umfangreiche forensisch-entomologische Untersuchungen

    an freiliegenden Menschenleichen durchführten, sowie MOTTER  in den USA, der 1896 und 1897 dieFauna exhumierter Leichen bestimmte sowie Leichen- und Erdbeschaffenheit und Liegezeit imGrab bestimmte. Gegen Ende des 19. und Anfang des 20. Jahrhunderts befassten sich die deutschen Ärzte K LINGELHÖFFER  and M ASCHKA  sowie der Rechtsmediziner HOROSKIEWICZ aus Krakau mitangeblichen Kindstötungen mit Hilfe von Schwefelsäure. In diesem Zusammenhang konnte ge-zeigt werden, dass Ameisen, Schaben und Süßwasser-Arthropoden postmortale Schäden verursa-chen können, die wie Kindesmissbrauch aussehen. Diese und zahlreiche andere Untersuchungenlegten den Grundstein für nachfolgende Monographien über forensisch wichtige Arthropoden, fürdiesbezügliche faunistische und ökologische Studien sowie für die Entwicklung moderner undimmer präziserer Methoden der forensischen Entomologie. Seit den 90iger Jahren des vorigen Jahrhunderts wird forensische Entomologie in zahlreichen Ländern auf nahezu allen Kontinentengelehrt und praktiziert. Außerdem gibt es seit 2002 regelmäßig internationale Schulungen.

     ForensischeEntomologie, Geschichte, Liegezeitbestimmung, P. M  ÉGNIN , kriminalbiologischer Nutzen von Insekten

    1. Introduction

    Hundreds of arthropod species are attractedby corpses, primarily flies (Diptera), beetles(Coleoptera) and their larvae, respectively, but

    also mites, isopods, opiliones and nemato-des can be found. These animals feed, live orbreed in and on the corpse, depending ontheir biological preferences and on the stateof decomposition. Since arthropods are byfar the largest and most important biologicalgroup on earth (they outnumber even plants),they can be found in a wide variety of loca-tions including crime scenes. This opens a

    wide range of applications for forensic ento-mology, the investigation of insects recover-ed from crime scenes and corpses.

    The following article gives a brief surveyof the historic sources describing the develop-ment that led to the present state of the artwith a major focus on work done between1850 and 1950 (BENECKE 1998, BENECKE2001a, BENECKE & LECLERCQ 1999).

    2. Medieval China to 19th century 

    The first documented forensic entomologycase is reported by the Chinese lawyer and

    death investigator SÒNG CÍ in the 13th cen-tury in the medico-legal text book (Xiyuan jílù; one possible translation: “col-lected writings on the washing away of wrongs”). He describes the case of a stabb-

    ing near a rice field. The day after the murder,the investigator told all workers to lay downtheir working tools (i.e., sickles) on the floor.Invisible traces of blood drew blow flies to asingle sickle. So confronted, the tool’s ownerconfessed to his crime and “knocked his headon the floor” (Fig. 1; see SÒNG CÍ/SUNG TZ’U1924; MCK NIGHT 1981). It took nearly eighthundred years until the next Chinese book 

    on forensic entomology was published (HU2000).In addition to medical and legal experts,

    sculptors, painters and poets have closely ob-served the decomposition of human bodies,noting, in particular, the effects of feedingmaggots. Early documents illustrating mag-gots on corpses date to the Middle Ages,including woodcuts from “Dances of theDeath”, oil paintings (both 15th century), en-gravings in tombstones (19th century), andthe intricately cut ivory carving, “Skeleton inthe Tumba” (16th century,Figs. 2-4) (BENE-CKE 1999). Detailed observations were pos-

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    Acta Biologica Benrodis 14 (2007)

    Fig. 1: First page of chapter 5 of SÒNG CÍSbook on forensic me-dicine deals with a caseof stabbing solved by

    use of insects. Adultflies detected blood onthe killer’s sickle (fromBENECKE 1999). Abb. 1: Erste Seite desKapitels 5 aus demBuch über forensischeMedizin von SÒNG CÍmit einem Fall, der mitHilfe von Insekten ge-

    klärt werden konnte. Adulte Fliegen ließensich nur auf der mitBlut kontaminiertenTatwaffe, einer Sichel,nieder (aus BENECKE1999).

    sible not only from victims of the frequentand violent wars but also exposure to de-

    composing bodies during plague outbreaksand similar diseases; the plague alone killed1/3 of all Europeans in the years 1346-1351.

    Such artwork accurately depicts the insect-mediated pattern of body mass reduction,particularly the skeletonization of the skulland the reduction of internal organs, withlarge parts of the skin left intact (L ANGLOIS1852; STAMMLER  1948); however, a metaphoric

    connotation is sometimes also present, e.g.the maggots as “snakes” (Fig. 3), and theblowfly replacing the heart (Fig. 4). Also, thepoem “Une charogne” by the French poet C.B AUDELAIRE (1821-1867) must be mentioned

    in this context, too, since it contains very goodobservations on the decay of human bodies,

    including an accurate reference to the soundof maggot masses on corpse (see B AUDELAIRE1857):

    “Et ce monde rendait une étrange musique,Comme l’eau courante et le vent,Ou le grain qu’un vanneur d’un mouvement

    rhythmique Agite et tourne dans son van.”

    (B AUDELAIRE

     1955) A century earlier, in 1767, the natural scien-

    tist C. VON LINNÉ made the observation thatthree flies would destroy a horse as fast as a

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    18 M ARK  BENECKE

    Fig. 2: Close observation of decomposition of human corpses built the basis for these figures.a: Grave of R OBERT TOUSE who “experts the resurrection of the dead” (exact time unknown, fromL ANGLOIS 1852);b, c: “Dances of the Death” (ca. 1460, from STAMMLER  1948). Note that maggotsare displayed similar to snakes or worms, and that all heads are already skeletonized due to the factthat adults preferably deposit their eggs on eyes, nose, ears and mouth. Abb. 2: Diese Abbildungen sind nicht nur symbolisch zu verstehen, sondern beruhen auf Beobach-

    tungen von Zersetzungsstadien echter Leichen. a: Grabplatte von R OBERT TOUSE, der auf die Auferstehung wartet (genaue Zeit unbekannt, aus L ANGLOIS 1852); b, c: Totentänze (etwa 1460,aus STAMMLER  1948). Man beachte das schlangen- oder wurmartige Aussehen der Fliegenlarven,aber auch die Tatsache, dass Maden zuerst die Schädel skelettieren, weil Fliegen ihre Eier bevorzugtan Augen, Nase, Ohren und Mund ablegen.

    lion would (in the sense of them producinglarge masses of maggots) (LINNÉ 1775) (Fig. 6).

    3. Early cases from France

    During mass exhumations in France andGermany in the 18th and 19th centuries, medi-co-legal doctors observed that buried bodies

    are colonized by arthropods of many kinds.In 1831, the famous French medical doctorsORFILA  & LESUEUR  (1831, 1835) observed a

    large number of exhumations. They under-stood that maggots play an important rolein the decomposition of corpses (Fig. 7).The first modern forensic entomology casereport to include an estimation of postmor-

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    Acta Biologica Benrodis 14 (2007)

    Fig. 3: Painting “Les amants trépassés”from the Musée de l‘Œvre Notre-Dame(Frauenhausmuseum, Strasbourg) from ca.1470. The bodies are mummified; the ani-mals do therefore not correlate to actual

    feeding patterns but seem to have a most-ly symbolic meaning. Abb. 3: Gemälde “Les amants trépassés”aus dem Museum de l‘Œvre Notre-Dame(Frauenhausmuseum, Straßburg) von1470. Die Körper sind mumifiziert. Die Auswahl der Tiere, auch der Insekten, isthier eher symbolisch zu verstehen; dem-gemäß passen auch die Fraßmuster nichtzu einer Madenbesiedlung.Fig. 4: Ivory “Little Dead” (Tödlein) as a

    Memento Mori. Note the very precise andrealistic artistic depiction of a corpse in ad- vanced decomposition under the influenceof maggots: head fully skeletonized, rib caseonly partially skeletonized with patches of intact skin (from Western Switzerland, ca.1520; length of skeleton 36 cm; SCHNÜT-GEN-Museum Cologne, Germany). Abb. 4: Tödlein aus Elfenbein als Memen-to Mori. Man beachte die sehr präzise und

    realistische Darstellung eines Körpers infortgeschrittener Zersetzung unter Einfluss von Maden: der Kopf ist vollständig ske-lettiert, der Brustkorb nur zum Teil (ausder Westschweiz, ca. 1520; Länge 36 cm;SCHNÜTGEN-Museum Köln, Germany).

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    Fig. 5:Illustration fromthe forensic entomol-ogist A. OLIVA  (Museum

    of Natural History, Bue-nos Aires, Argentina)relating to B AUDELAIRE’spoem “Une chargone”that precisely describesstates of decompositionincluding maggot activ-ity (Frontispiz in Baude-laire 1955). Abb. 5: Von der Ento-mologin A. OLIVA  (Na-

    turkundemuseum Bue-nos Aires) angefertigteIllustration zu B AUDE-LAIREs Gedicht „Ein Aas“ („Une chargone“),das präzise die Zerset-zung einer Leiche ein-schließlich der Aktivität von Maden beschreibt.

     Abb. 6: Beschreibungeiner Schmeißfliege undihrer Zerstörungskraft(aus LINNÉ 1775).Fig. 6: Description of afly and tissue loss due tomaggots (from LINNÉ1775).

    tem interval (PMI) was given by the French

    doctor BERGERET (1855). The case dealt withblow fly pupae and larval moths. ThoughBERGERET was by profession a hospital physi-cian (at the Hopital Civil d’Arbois), his in-terest in cadaver study is clear, as he states that

    a corpse dealt with by him resembled those

    he had observed found in other locations(i.e., “in the hot and dry lands (“pays chauds”)on the cemetery of the Capucins of Paler-me”, or “in Toulouse”). His original reportto the court was dated March 28, 1850. In his

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    Acta Biologica Benrodis 14 (2007)

    Fig. 7: Early account of insects oncorpses already determined to thespecies (from ORFILA  & LESUEUR 1831). Abb. 7: Frühe Darstellung von be-reits bis zur Art bestimmt Insektenauf Leichen (aus ORFILA  & LESU-

    EUR  1831).

     journal article, next to a long description of the criminal impact in the trial, he also de-scribes the court proceedings:

    “Within three years, four different tenants[i.e., families] lived in the flat. The first of them left in December 1848, and the personexamined started to live there at the end of 1844. I [i.e., BERGERET] was brought to thehouse of Mme. Saillard [i.e., the landlady] inrue du Citoyen, 4, (...) to examine the corpseof a child. (...) Length of corpse: [46 cm].[Then details on measurements of bones,

    state of internal organs, etc. follow.]. Thequestions we had to deal with now were: 1.Was the child born regularly/ at the right time,2. Was it alive when it was born, 3. How longdid it live, 4. How did it die?, 5. What was thetime interval between birth and death?” Ques-tions 1 to 4 were answered with classical fo-rensic pathology. Question 5 was comment-ed in the following way: “To answer this ques-tion, legal medicine must check with anotherscience, the natural sciences.” However, BER -GERET (1855) does not state whether he

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    worked together with another person.In his paper, BERGERET (1855) gives a brief overview on the life cycle of insects in gen-eral. He mistakenly assumes, however, thatmetamorphosis would generally require a full

     year. Furthermore, he assumes that femalesgenerally lay eggs in summer and that thelarvae would transform to pupae (he callsthem nymphs) the following spring and hatchin summer. Some details of BERGERET’s cal-culation:

    “The eggs of the larvae we found on thecorpse in March 1850 must have been de-posited there in the middle of 1849. There-

    fore, the corpse must have been depositedbefore this time interval. Next to the manyliving larvae there were numerous pupae pres-ent, and they must come from eggs that havebeen laid earlier, i.e., in 1848. (...) Could it bethat the corpse was deposited even beforethat time [i.e., 1848]? The fly that emergesfrom the pupae that we found in the bodycavities, is Musca carnaria L. that lays its eggs

    before the body dries out. We found otherpupae of little butterflies of the night [moth],too, that attack bodies that are already driedout. If the body was deposited, say, in 1846or 1847, we would not have found those lar-

     vae [since they would have hatched]. In con-clusion, two generations of insects werefound on the corpse, representing two yearspostmortem: on the fresh corpse, the fleshfly deposited its eggs in 1848, on the dried

    out corpse, the moth laid their eggs in 1849.”In retrospect, one should understand thatBERGERET did not focus on forensic ento-mology in his report but used the method asone forensic tool among others. Indeed, themummification of the cadaver appears to behis overriding issue of interest in this case.BERGERET references ORFILA  & LESUEUR  (1831,1835) in the matters of both mummificati-

    on and forensic entomology. He also clearlynotes the lack of knowledge concerning in-sect succession on corpses in his day.In 1879, the president of the French Societyof Forensic Medicine, BROUARDEL reported

    another early case. P.C.H. BROUARDEL, born inSaint-Quentin on 13 February 1837, becamea member of the French Academy of Medici-ne in 1880. He worked on tuberculosis, vac-cination and legal medicine. His numerousmedico-legal accounts include practical guide-lines for his colleagues in the morgue. A con-temporary said that “his work is conscien-tious, clear, methodic, and serves as a mo-del” (quote from encyclopedia of that time;retrieved in 1998 by MB in Manhattan (New

     York University (NYU) Hospital Library);exact title and year unknown.)

    In his report, after referencing the work of 

    BERGERET (l.c.), BROUARDEL (1879) describesthe case of a newborn child that was auto-psied by him on January 15, 1878. The mum-mified body was inhabited by several arthro-pods, including butterfly larvae and mites,which led to a request for assistance fromMonsieur PERIER , professor at the Museumof Natural History in Paris, and army veteri-narian J.P. MÉGNIN. PERIER  reported that the

    body was most likely dried out before it wasabandoned. The determination of mites wasleft to MÉGNIN whereas PERIER  determinedthe butterfly larvae as “chenilles d’aglosses”,i.e., larvae from the genus Aglossa (smallmoth, family Pyralidae). From the state of preservation and from the larvae found,PERIER  stated that the baby may have beenborn and died the summer before (“de l’étédernier probablement”), i.e., around six to

    seven month before the corpse was auto-psied.

    MÉGNIN (1894) reported that the wholebody was covered with a brownish layer com-posed exclusively of mite skins and mitefeces, but not living mites. Inside the crani-um he found large numbers of a single mitespecies. Initially, a few larval mites must havebeen carried to the corpse by other arthro-

    pods. MÉGNIN (1894) calculated that on thewhole body 2.4 million dead or living miteswere present. He also calculated that after 15days the first generation with 10 females and5 males had developed; after 30 days, 100 fe-

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    1876 and 1879) and reported some of hisresults in his book “Faune des Tombeaux”(Fauna of the Tombs, 1887). No affiliationto a university or a Museum of Natural Hi-story was mentioned in his articles, and be-cause he became a member of the French

     Academy of Medicine in 1893, one mightconclude that he considered himself primar-ily a medical doctor.

    MÉGNIN drew on his 15 years of medico-legal experience with corpses in publishing14, mostly brief, papers between 1883 (see

     A NONYMUS 1883) and 1896. He found faultin the dissertation of his younger French col-

    league G.P. Y OVANOVITCH, of the Faculty of Medicine, Paris, on the same subject (Y OVA -NOVITCH 1888). MÉGNIN was under the im-pression that Y OVANOVITCH’s data were notsufficiently precise. Previously, the two re-searchers had co-operated in the sense that

     Y OVANOVITCH was allowed to use MÉGNIN’sdata, including tables of mites and the suc-cession table of five cadaverous fauna waves

    that Y OVANOVITCH titled ”Toilers on theDead” (“Les travailleurs de la mort”, obviouslybeing a pun related to the book “Toilers of the Sea” (“Les travailleurs de la mer” by theFrench author V. HUGO, 1866).

    Finally, in 1894, MÉGNIN published hisbook “La faune des cadavres” (Fig. 8). In it,he expanded his former theory of four insectwaves for freely exposed corpses to eight suc-cessive waves. For buried corpses, he reported

    two waves. The book dealt with larval andadult forms of a number of families, and itsdrawings focused on wing venation, posteriorspiracles, and overall anatomy of the insectsfor identification (Fig. 9). MÉGNIN also de-scribes 19 case reports, including his owncases between 1879 and 1888. (Some of thecases were in co-operation with BROUARDEL.)He cites his original statements given in court

    as well as the basic questions asked of him asan expert witness.In addition to advancing the science of for-

    ensic entomology MÉGNIN’s work greatlypopularized the subject. His contributions

    to our knowledge of the arthropod fauna of graves and the general fauna and flora of mummified, or otherwise decayed, corpseswas later honored in the naming of the mold

     Endoconidiummegnini.In 1897, inspired by MÉGNIN, the Cana-

    dian researches W. JOHNSTON and G. V ILLE-NEUVE, of Montreal, started a number of systematic entomological studies on humancorpses. The two scientists write of MÉGNIN:“(...) in no single instance did the results of the inquiry go to show that MÉGNIN’s de-ductions were erroneous. (...) The chief dan-ger to be feared from MÉGNIN’s imitators is

    that they might tend to indulge in guesseshaving no very solid basis and to apply rulesto countries and climates where they wereinapplicable.” They aimed to refine the work of MÉGNIN and to adapt it to their localfaunas. Another study on this subject had already

    been set up by M.G. MOTTER , “Volunteer inthe United States Bureau for Animal In-

    dustry”, and his co-workers a few years pre- vious. Shortly after, in the summers of 1896and 1897, MOTTER ‘s group systematicallyand critically checked more than 150 ex-humed corpses from Washington, D.C. Inhis report, MOTTER  (1898) provides brief descriptions of the entomological findingsas well as brief comments on soil type,grave depth, etc. A speech he “read beforethe public section of the British Medical As-

    sociation” in 1897 carried the title “Under-ground Zoology and Legal Medicine” (MOT-TER  1897). Another report in 1895 came from Swe-

    den where SCHÖYEN gave an overview of work that could be applied to the investiga-tion of “graveness fauna”, or the fauna of graves. (SCHÖYEN 1895). However, he refersprimarily to species already mentioned in

    R EINHARD’s and MÉGNIN’s publications. Theonly forensic entomology studies of thattime no longer available are those performedby HOUGH in New Bedford from 1894 to1897, as he never published his data.

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    Fig. 9: Figures of flies from MÉGNIN’s “Faune des cadavres” (1894). a “Sarcophaga carnaria” (Sar-cophaga carnaria); b “ Pyophila petasionis.” ( Piophila casei); c “ Lucilia caesar ” (maggot); d from left toright: “Silpha obscura” (adult and larva), “Saprinus rotondatus” (adult and larva), “ Hister cadaverinus”(adult), and “Tenebrio obscurens” (adult and larva). Determination features were given quite thesame way as today, e.g. by wing venation, antennae, posterior spiracles and characteristics of pupae.

     Abb. 9: Abbildungen aus MÉGNINs „Fauna der Leichen“ (1894).a „Sarcophaga carnaria.” (Sarcophagacarnaria);b „ Pyophila petasionis” ( Piophila casei);c „ Lucilia caesar  “ (maggot);d von links nach rechts:„Silpha obscura” (adult und larval), „Saprinus rotondatus” (adult und larval), „ Hister cadaverinus”(adult) und „Tenebrio obscurens” (adult und larval). Die Bestimmungsmerkmale waren wie heutenoch u.a. durch Flügeläderung, die Antennen, Stigmen und Merkmale der Puppen.

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    5. Turn of the century 

    Previous forensic insect studies by the Ger-man doctors K LINGELHÖFFER  and M ASCHKA ,and the forensic pathologist S. VON HOROSZ-KIEWICZ from Krakow University (then

     Austria, now Poland), had focused on thebite patterns of cockroaches and ants. K LIN-GELHÖFFER  (1898), a district medical doctorresponsible for the Frankfurt area, relates thecase of a poor family, whose nine month old,sickly baby died on May 26, 1889, and wasautopsied three days later, on May 29. In themeantime, the local “doctor responsible for

    the poor” had filed a report to the police be-cause he had observed patches in the face of the child, leading to the father’s arrest. Dur-ing the resulting autopsy, the “patches” werenoted on the nose and lips and to proceeddownwards from the child’s mouth. Thetongue was not discolored, but bleeding onthe tip. Of particular interest to the policewas confirmation of their suspicions that the

    father had tried to make the child drink sul-phuric acid, a common method of poison-ing at that time. However, K LINGELHÖFFER found no signs of poisoning, and conclud-ed that the abrasion-like patterns had mostlikely been caused by cockroaches. The fatherwas released after three weeks in prison (K LIN-GELHÖFFER  1898).

    HOROSZKIEWICZ (1902) dealt with a similarcase, in which a child was autopsied in April,

    1899. The autopsy found no internal signsof violent death, however, numerous ab-rasions could be seen on the nose, cheeks,lips and chin, with more obvious marks onthe surface of the neck and backside of theleft hand, fingers, genitals and the inner thighs.When questioned by HOROSZKIEWICZ, themother stated that when she came homefrom preparing for the funeral, the body of 

    her child had looked as if it was covered witha black shroud (“mit einem schwarzen Lei-chentuche bedeckt”, p. 236) of cockroaches,but she did not see any abrasions at that time.To verify whether the cockroaches could be

    the sole cause for the abrasions, HOROSZ-KIEWICZ put pieces of fresh tissue from hu-man corpses in glasses filled with cockroaches.While no obvious signs of cockroach feedingwere apparent immediately after the feedingactivity, they became visible when the skindried, explaining why the mother had notseen the abrasions but the medical examinershad.

    Similar cases were reported by medical exam-iner M ASCHKA  (1881) from Austria who be-came involved in high profile cases in themodern sense of the phrase. In one case, hefound abrasions on a child whose body was

    discovered in a well. It was believed that asexual offender may have abused the childand then strangled, or throttled, it beforethrowing it in the well. M ASCHKA , however,concluded that the lesions must have beencaused by arthropods. In another case, it wasthought that a father may have killed his three-day-old child by forcing it to drink sulphuricacid. The father, however, stated that he had

    put the child, after it had died of naturalcauses, near the window at 22:00 hrs on April14, 1880. He reported that on 04:00 hrs thenext day, the child’s head, located under a blan-ket, was already covered with ants. M ASCHKA ’sfindings at autopsy were consistent with thefather’s account. Another experimental account was given

    by E. R ITTER   VON NIEZABITOWSKI (1902), alsoa medical examiner at the Medico-Legal Insti-

    tute of Krakow University. His experimentswere performed from May, 1899, to Septem-ber, 1900, using aborted fetuses and cat, fox,rat, mole and calf cadavers that he put on thewindowsill in the institute as well as in a nearby

     vegetable garden. His observations dealt pri-marily with flies: calliphorids, Lucilia caesar ,Sarcophaga carnaria, and “ Pyophila nigriceps”(most likely, cheese skippers Piophila casei); but it

    also included beetles, mostlySilpha, Necrophorusor Dermestes. His important contribution to thefield was the experimental proof that humancorpses share the same fauna with animalcorpses, both vertebrate and invertebrate.

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    Fig. 10: The fauna of corpses was a popular subject at the end of the 19th century. Figures from oneof the best known books of its time in Germany, “BREHMs Thierleben”. Top: Animals on fresh corpses:Dead mole with correct selection of clearly identifiable insects that are attracted to early decompo-sition, e.g. silphid, histerid and staphylinid beetles, blowflies (Calliphoridae), flesh flies (Sarcophagi-dae) and others. Bottom row: Animals on dried out corpses: 1, 2 Anthrenus sp. (“museum beetle”) withlarvae; 3-5 Ptinussp. and larvae; 6, 7 Attagenus pelliowith larvae; 8, 9 Dermestes lardarius and larvae(from T ASCHENBERG 1877). Abb. 10 : Leichenfaunen waren gegen Ende des 19. Jahrhunderts in Deutschland sehr populär. Abbil-dungen finden sich in einem der am besten bekannten Bücher dieser Zeit „BREHM’s Thierleben”. Oben:Tiere auf frischen Leichen: Toter Maulwurf mit einer korrekten Auswahl von deutlich zu identifizieren-den angelockten Insekten, u.a. Silphiden, Histeriden, Staphyliniden, Calliphoriden und Sarcophagiden.Unten: Tiere an ausgetrockneten Leichen: 1, 2 Anthrenus sp. („Museumskäfer”) mit Larven; 3-5 Ptinussp.mit Larven; 6, 7 Attagenus pelliomit Larven; 8, 9 Dermestes lardarius mit Larven (aus T ASCHENBERG 1877).

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    Meanwhile, turn-of-the-century France andGermany enjoyed a general increase in interestin zoological studies including invertebratelife. As evidence, we see the great success of two popular book series from that time, “A.BREHMs Thierleben“ (BREHM 1876-1879, Fig.10), and even more “J. H. F ABRE’s Souvenirsentomologiques” (F ABRE 1879-1909) with itsGerman edition (F ABRE 1908-1910; see Fig.11), among other topics specifically dealingwith carrion beetles and blow flies. Thesebooks, still well-known to the public in Cen-tral Europe, inspired an interest in entomol-ogy in large numbers of people. Among the

    lasting benefits of this popularity are nu-merous ecological studies that continue to bedrawn upon in forensic case studies today.

    In 1907, C. MORLEY  published an article inEngland dealing with the question of whatspecies should be classified as carrion beetles.

    He stated that during ten years of collectinghe found that winter was “almost the besttime” for carrion beetles and that there are(so-called) carrion beetles that are not carnivor-ous but “act as final dissolvers to the ancientcarcasses. (...) it is still a mystery to me what

     N[ecrophorus] vespillofeeds upon.” Papers likethis were the early basis for the systematicecological studies that have influenced foren-sic entomology since the 1920’s. In 1912,there was even a paper presented at the Ger-man Society for Forensic Medicine (A NONY -MUS 1912), and in 1919, there was even a re-port by HUNZIKER  dealing with the fauna and

    flora found in graves in Basel (Switzerland).

    6. Circa the World Wars

    Beginning in the 1920s, species lists andmonographs on forensically important insects

    Fig. 11: HENRI F ABRE popularized the life of arthropods in his “Souvenirs entomologiques“. Here a

    German edition of his books. Note pictures of carrion-feeding insects on the covers (from F ABRE1908-1910). Abb. 11: HENRI F ABRE popularisierte die Biologie von Arthropoden mit seinen „Souvenirs entomo-logiques“. Hier eine deutsche Ausgabe; auf den Titelseiten finden sich sogar Abbildungen von Aasfressenden Insekten (aus F ABRE 1908-1910).

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    were finally published, with a focus on ecol-ogy, metabolism or anatomy. Pest control,and “maggot therapy” were both of growinginterest during this period, and many contri-butions stemmed from these fields, creatinga major scientific source for interpretation of forensic insect evidence. In the context of pestcontrol, for instance, it was found that adultflies may be present near dying persons oranimals before their actual death. It also be-came popular to investigate the entomolog-ical status of ancient mummies.

    The interest in maggots on corpses re-mained high in 1922, when K. MEIXNER , pro-

    fessor at the Institute for Legal Medicine in Vienna and Innsbruck, reported cases in in- volving bodies that quickly disintegrated whilebeing put into storage in the institute’s base-ment (MEIXNER  1922). This rapid disintegra-tion was most dramatic with juvenilecorpses. Apart from references to ORFILA  andMÉGNIN, no further data were collected byMEIXNER .

     A few years later, H. MERKEL, professor atthe Institute for Legal Medicine in Munich,extended MEIXNER ’s observations with casereports that demonstrated that the circum-stances of death could influence the courseof insect succession. In a case from summer1919, a son had killed his parents and storedthe bodies next to each other for three weeks.

     At autopsy, the bodies were found to be indifferent states of decomposition: The obese

    body of the mother (shot in the heart) wasin full bloated decay, with both eyeballs de-stroyed by the actions of maggots and nu-merous maggots already present inside of the (liquefying) brain tissue. Her internal or-gans were comparably intact and no maggotswere present inside of the fat layers. By con-trast, the father’s slim body had already beeninfested with numerous maggots in all cav-

    ities, with all internal organs destroyed andpupae already developed. The reason for theincreased maggot presence in the father’sbody was that he had not only been shot butalso repeatedly stabbed. This attracted flies to

    deposit eggs not only in the facial area butalso into the wounds. In another case, MER -KEL found the mummified body of a personwho died at home, with not one single mag-got being present (MERKEL 1925).

    In Italy, G. BIANCHINI, director of the In-stitute for Legal Medicine of Bari University,wrote a “contribution to the practical and ex-perimental study of the fauna of corpses” in1929. BIANCHINI’s case report deals with thecorpse of a four-year-old child that had dried-out lesions of the skin on the ears, arms, theabdominal area and the upper side of thethighs. Arthropods collected from the body

    included mites, “very small scorpions”, smallbeetles and ants. Identification of the antswas performed by C. MINOZZI, and after furt-her experimentation, BIANCHINI concludedthat the lesions must have been caused byants of the same species as found on thecorpse within a period of around 24 hours.

     A former case report of R  AIMONDI & R OSSI(1888) dealt with the influence ofGammarus

    pulex, a freshwater crustacean, on corpses. Theauthors found that Gammaruscan producelarge numbers of small needle-like lesions.In their case report, it was concluded that abody had been stored in a freshwater con-tainment.

    The only case report during the 1930’sseems to come from F.J. HOLZER , medicalexaminer at the Institute for Legal Medicinein Innsbruck, Austria. HOLZER  (1939) inves-

    tigated the type of destruction caused bycaddis flies feeding on corpses submerged infreshwater. In an actual case from April 1937,he found that caddis flies had destroyed allskin layers of the thighs up to the lower bor-der of a pair of shorts as well as larger partsof the facial skin (Fig. 12). It was late winter/early spring with low temperatures, and therehad clearly been no blowfly maggots present.

    HOLZER  had never observed such patternsof destruction, even in cases where caddis flycasings had actually been present on corpses.Therefore, he collected caddis flies from thebody of water in which the corpse had been

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    Fig. 12: Influence of caddis flies on a child’s body; case investigated by HOLZER  (1939). Abb. 12: Einwirkungen von Köcherfliegen auf den Körper eines Kindes; Fallbeispiel von HOLZER (1939).

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    found and put them in three aquariums con-taining an aborted fetus, a rat and a guineapig, respectively. In doing so, he demonstra-ted that caddis flies were the cause of the lesi-ons observed on the child.

    In 1933, K. W ALCHER  from the Institutefor Legal Medicine in Munich reports that hefound maggots entering the spongiosa of long bones to reach the bone marrow (cir-cumstances: suicide, post mortem interval 100days outside). Since the skeleton was intact,W ALCHER  (1933) suggested that the animalscrept through foramina nutritia, tiny gaps inthe bones that allow blood vessels, and ner-

     ves to enter the bones. (I observed similarbut always and only with cheese skipper lar-

     vae, Piophila casei, which are much smaller thanblowfly larvae (Fig. 13)).

    7. After the World Wars

    During the 1940’s, only a note of J. BEQUAERT(A NONYMUS 1945) seems to deal with the useof insects to determine the postmortem in-terval. In the 1950’s, H. C ASPERS from theZoological Institute and Museum of the StateHamburg introduced the use of caddis flycasings as a tool for forensic investigation(Fig.14; C ASPERS 1952). The body of a dead wom-an, naked except of a pair of red socks andwrapped in a sack, had been found in 1948 ina moat of a windmill. The question was if the body was disposed there immediately af-

    ter the killing or if it was stored elsewherebefore it was dumped. In a caddis fly casing(most likely of Limnophilus flavicornis) that wasfound on one sock, fibers of the red socks

    Fig. 13: Confirmation of an exclusive observation of W ALCHER  (1933): live larval Piophila casei ina fully intact bone of a human corpse entered through tiny holes ( foramina nutritia) before (Cologne,

    October 2001). Abb. 13: Bestätigung der sonst nie berichteten Beobachtung von W ALCHER  (1933): lebende Larven von Piophila casei in einem soeben aufgesägten, zuvor intakten Langknochen einer menschlichenLeiche (Köln, Oktober 2001). Die Tiere sind durch foramina nutritia ins Innere der Knocheneingedrungen.

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    had clearly been used to build the casing.

    However, the fibers were only found at the very top, and the very bottom of the casingwhich meant that the fly had already built hercase before she entered the sack. She then fin-ished the casing (fibers on top) and attachedit to the sock (fibers on bottom). Since theattachment procedure lasts at least some days,it was estimated that the body was lying inthe water for at least one week. Further crimi-nal evidence led to the conclusion that the

    entomological result indicated that the bodyhad been stored elsewhere before it wasdumped. With the description of C ASPER ’scase, our historic survey on forensic entomol-ogy ends.

    8. Recent History 

    Between the 1960’s and 1980’s, forensic ento-

    mology was maintained primarily by LE-CLERCQ (1968), LECLERCQ & QUINET (1949),LECLERCQ & BRAHY  (1990) (Belgium) andprofessor of biology P. NUORTEVA  ET  AL.(1967, 1974) (first, Helsinki Zoological Mu-

    seum, later, professor at the Department of 

    Environmental Protection and Conservation,University of Helsinki, Finland, Fig. 15), witha focus on case work, German doctors with aspecialization in forensic medicine POLLAK  &R EITER  (1988), R EITER  (1984, 1985), R EITER & WOLLENEK  (1982, 1983, 1985) and R EITER & H AJEK  (1984), and in the United States, byGOFF (2000), GREENBERG & K UNICH (2002),LORD et al. (1986, 1992, 1994, 1998) and LORD& BURGER  (1983), amongst others (Fig. 16).

    NUORTEVA  (1977) and NUORTEVA  ET  AL.(1974) wrote an important and quite lengthyhandbook article about forensic entomologythat inspired many researchers (e.g. NUORTEVA 1977). K. SMITH, then head of the fly collec-tion in the British Museum (London),published the very influential “Manual of Forensic Entomology” (1985, 1986) that, inhis own words, holds mostly historical value

    but in spite of this is still in good use insome laboratories.Since then, basic research and advanced ap-

    plication of forensic entomology opened theway to routine casework. It seems that recent

    Fig. 14: A case reported by C ASPERS (1952). A caddis-fly larvae have built in their shelters the redfibers of the socks of a dead woman, thus, giving evidence for the period the corps was in thewater. Abb. 14: Ein von C ASPERS (1952) berichteter Fall, in dem von Trichopteren-Larven in ihre Wohn-röhren eingearbeiteten rote Sockenfasern Anhaltspunkte für die Liegezeit der Leiche im Wassergaben.

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    Fig. 15: Case report by PEKKA  NUORTEVA . The importance of case reports in forensic literaturecannot be overestimated. Abb. 15: Fallstudie von PEKKA  NUORTEVA . Einzelfallberichte sollten in der forensischen Literatur

    nicht unterbewertet werden.

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    34 M ARK  BENECKE

    Fig. 16: Selection of cur-rent textbooks about thetopic. Abb. 16: Auswahl vonLehrbüchern zum Thema.

    Fig. 17: A jet ant (woodant ) Lasius fuliginosus be-came crucial evidence in aconviction for man-slaughter performed by aGerman priest. The antwas found under the bootof the offender (Photo: A.NIVAGGIOLI; case details inBENECKE & SEIFERT 1999). Abb. 17: Eine Holzamei-se Lasius fuliginosus gab

    den entscheidenden Hin-weis für die Verurteilungeines Priesers wegen Tot-schlags. Die Ameise wur-de unter dem Steifel des Angeklagten gefunden(Foto: A. NIVAGGIOLI; Ein-zelheiten des Falles beiBENECKE & SEIFERT 1999).

    high profile cases (Fig. 17), popular scienceaccounts and textbooks (Figs. 8, 16) as wellas international trainings (e.g., at the FBI Acad-emy (Quantico) at the Anthropological Rese-arch Facility (Univ. Tennessee) and at the Uni-

     versity of Cologne) helped most to establishthe discipline in current routine police andforensic practice.

    By now, researchers worldwide use ento-mology in criminal investigations including

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    murder, child neglect and crimes againstanimals. The French State Police (Institutede Recherche Criminelle de la GendarmerieNationale) is one of the few police institu-tions with a fully equipped and operation-al laboratory; most of the other forensicentomology laboratories are based at uni-

     versities with very unstable funding. Thereis still a lot of room for research, expan-sion and improvement, not only becauseof climatic changes that strongly affect in-sect communities but also because of a lack of proper job offers for the past and forthe next generation of forensic entomol-

    ogists (INTRONA  & C AMPOBASSO 1998; ER -ZINÇLIOGLU 2000; B YRD & C ASTNER  2001;BENECKE 2001b, 2004)

     Acknowledgements

    Burkhard M ADEA  for bringing to my atten-tion the painting “Les aments trespasses” andto the Frauenhausmuseum, Strasbourg, for

    providing extra information. Hartmut GRE- VEN and Kristina B AUMJOHANN meticulouslyedited the script. Corinna BREMER  helped withthe complicated Chinese translations andphonetic transcriptions.

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    Received: 29.08.2007 Accepted: 15.09.2007

    * Die korrekte transkribierte Schreibweise lautet Sòng Cí, wie MB in China verifizieren konnte. Inden Bibliotheken ist der Autor jedoch in der falschen Schreibweise Sung Ti zu finden.