Centre for Forensic Science, University of Western Australia, 35 Stirling Highway, Crawley, WA, Australia.
Forensic Sci Int. 2010 May 20;198(1-3):85-91. doi: 10.1016/j.forsciint.2010.01.006. Epub 2010 Feb 18.
Estimation of time since death is an important factor in forensic investigations and the state of decomposition of a body is a prime basis for such estimations. The rate of decomposition is, however, affected by many environmental factors such as temperature, rainfall, and solar radiation as well as by indoor or outdoor location, covering and the type of surface the body is resting upon. Scavenging has the potential for major impact upon the rate of decomposition of a body, but there is little direct research upon its effect. The information that is available relates almost exclusively to North American and European contexts. The Australian faunal assemblage is unique in that it includes no native large predators or large detrivorous avians. This research investigates the animals that scavenge carcasses in natural outdoor settings in southern Western Australia and the factors which can affect each scavenger's activity. The research was conducted at four locations around Perth, Western Australia with different environmental conditions. Pig carcasses, acting as models for the human body, were positioned in an outdoor environment with no protection from scavengers or other environmental conditions. Twenty-four hour continuous time-lapse video capture was used to observe the pattern of visits of all animals to the carcasses. The time of day, length of feeding, material fed upon, area of feeding, and any movement of the carcass were recorded for each feeding event. Some species were observed to scavenge almost continually throughout the day and night. Insectivores visited the carcasses mostly during bloat and putrefaction; omnivores fed during all stages of decomposition and scavenging by carnivores, rare at any time, was most likely to occur during the early stages of decomposition. Avian species, which were the most prolific visitors to the carcasses in all locations, like reptiles, fed only during daylight hours. Only mammals and amphibians, which were seldom seen during diurnal hours, were nocturnal feeders. The combined effects of the whole guild of scavengers significantly accelerated the later stages of decomposition, especially in the cooler months of the year when natural decomposition was slowest.
死亡时间的估计是法医学调查的一个重要因素,而尸体的分解状态是进行此类估计的主要依据。然而,分解的速度受到许多环境因素的影响,例如温度、降雨和太阳辐射,以及室内或室外的位置、覆盖物以及尸体所放置的表面类型。食腐动物对尸体的分解速度有潜在的重大影响,但对其影响的直接研究很少。现有的信息几乎完全与北美和欧洲的情况有关。澳大利亚的动物群是独一无二的,因为它没有本地的大型捕食者或大型食腐鸟类。本研究调查了在澳大利亚西南部自然户外环境中以尸体为食的动物,以及可能影响每个食腐动物活动的因素。研究在西澳大利亚州珀斯周围的四个地点进行,这些地点的环境条件不同。猪的尸体被用作人体模型,放置在户外环境中,没有受到食腐动物或其他环境条件的保护。24 小时不间断的延时视频捕捉被用来观察所有动物对尸体的访问模式。每天的时间、进食时间、进食的物质、进食区域以及尸体的任何移动都被记录下来。一些物种被观察到几乎整天整夜都在觅食。食虫动物主要在肿胀和腐烂期访问尸体;杂食动物在分解和食腐的所有阶段进食,而在任何时候都很少见的肉食性动物的食腐行为最有可能发生在分解的早期阶段。在所有地点,鸟类是最常访问尸体的物种,与爬行动物一样,它们只在白天进食。只有在白天很少见的哺乳动物和两栖动物才是夜行性动物。整个食腐动物群体的综合作用显著加速了后期的分解阶段,特别是在一年中自然分解最慢的较冷月份。