Perotti M Alejandra
School of Biological Sciences, University of Reading, Whiteknights, Reading, Berkshire, RG6 6AH, UK.
Exp Appl Acarol. 2009 Oct;49(1-2):37-44. doi: 10.1007/s10493-009-9279-6. Epub 2009 Jun 26.
This paper analyses acarological evidence from a 130-year-old forensic investigation. It was the first case in forensic acarology, i.e., the first case where mites provided substantial information to estimate the post-mortem interval (PMI). In 1878, the mites found in the mummified body of a newborn baby girl in Paris, France, were studied by acarologist and forensic entomologist Jean Pierre Mégnin. Mégnin estimated around 2.4 million mites in the skull and identified them as Tyroglyphus longior (Gervais), a junior synonym of Tyrophagus longior. He suggested that the arrival of these mites at the corpse would have occurred by phoresy on carrier insects, roughly 5 months before the autopsy. There is no doubt about the identification of the mites, Mégnin was a highly respected acarologist. However, two main factors affecting the biology of Tyrophagus mites were not included in the original analysis. First, Mégnin stated that the mites were phoretic. However, he probably did not have access to information about the natural history of the species, because as a rule Tyrophagus mites are non-phoretic. Considering the omnipresence of Tyrophagus mites in soil, most likely the mites will have arrived almost immediately after death. Second, temperature was not taken into account during the estimations of the mite population growth rate. The new analysis is based on current knowledge of Tyrophagus biology and includes temperature, estimated following a handful of weather reports of the years 1877 and 1878. The new projections indicate that non-phoretic mites may have colonised the body just after death and the colony would have built up over 8 months, contrary to the 5 months proposed by Mégnin. This new lapse of time agrees with the PMI proposed by Brouardel: on 15 January 1878 he postulated the death of the newborn to have occurred some 8 months before the autopsy.
本文分析了一项有着130年历史的法医调查中的螨类学证据。这是法医螨类学的首例案件,即螨类首次为估计死后间隔时间(PMI)提供了重要信息的案件。1878年,法国巴黎一名新生女婴的木乃伊尸体上发现的螨类,由螨类学家兼法医昆虫学家让·皮埃尔·梅尼进行了研究。梅尼估计头骨中有约240万只螨,并将它们鉴定为长食酪螨(Gervais),即长食酪螨的次异名。他认为这些螨类是通过搭乘携带昆虫的方式在尸体上出现的,大约在尸检前5个月。螨类的鉴定无疑是准确的,梅尼是一位备受尊敬的螨类学家。然而,最初的分析没有考虑影响食酪螨生物学特性的两个主要因素。首先,梅尼称这些螨类是携播性的。然而,他可能无法获取该物种自然史的相关信息,因为通常食酪螨不是携播性的。鉴于食酪螨在土壤中无处不在,很可能这些螨类在死亡后几乎立即就到达了。其次,在估计螨类种群增长率时没有考虑温度因素。新的分析基于对食酪螨生物学的现有认识,并根据1877年和1878年的一些气象报告估算了温度。新的预测表明,非携播性螨类可能在死亡后不久就已在尸体上定殖,且种群数量会在超过8个月的时间里增长,这与梅尼提出的5个月不同。这个新的时间间隔与布鲁阿代尔提出的PMI一致:1878年1月15日,他推测这名新生儿的死亡时间大约在尸检前8个月。