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1 July 2013 Effect of Variable Rates of Daily Sampling of Fly Larvae on Decomposition and Carrion Insect Community Assembly: Implications for Forensic Entomology Field Study Protocols
Jean-Philippe Michaud, Gaétan Moreau
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Abstract

Experimental protocols in forensic entomology successional field studies generally involve daily sampling of insects to document temporal changes in species composition on animal carcasses. One challenge with that method has been to adjust the sampling intensity to obtain the best representation of the community present without affecting the said community. To this date, little is known about how such investigator perturbations affect decomposition-related processes. Here, we investigated how different levels of daily sampling of fly eggs and fly larvae affected, over time, carcass decomposition rate and the carrion insect community. Results indicated that a daily sampling of <5% of the egg and larvae volumes present on a carcass, a sampling intensity believed to be consistent with current accepted practices in successional field studies, had little effect overall. Higher sampling intensities, however, slowed down carcass decomposition, affected the abundance of certain carrion insects, and caused an increase in the volume of eggs laid by dipterans. This study suggests that the carrion insect community not only has a limited resilience to recurrent perturbations but that a daily sampling intensity equal to or <5% of the egg and larvae volumes appears adequate to ensure that the system is representative of unsampled conditions. Hence we propose that this threshold be accepted as best practice in future forensic entomology successional field studies.

© 2013 Entomological Society of America
Jean-Philippe Michaud and Gaétan Moreau "Effect of Variable Rates of Daily Sampling of Fly Larvae on Decomposition and Carrion Insect Community Assembly: Implications for Forensic Entomology Field Study Protocols," Journal of Medical Entomology 50(4), 890-897, (1 July 2013). https://doi.org/10.1603/ME12200
Received: 7 September 2012; Accepted: 1 April 2013; Published: 1 July 2013
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KEYWORDS
community resilience
investigator disturbance
repeated sampling
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