Laboratory of Soil Biology, University of Neuchâtel, Rue Emile-Argand 11, 2000 Neuchâtel, Switzerland; Institute of Forensic Medicine, Goethe-University, 60596 Frankfurt/Main, Germany.
Laboratory of Soil Biology, University of Neuchâtel, Rue Emile-Argand 11, 2000 Neuchâtel, Switzerland.
Forensic Sci Int. 2014 Mar;236:90-8. doi: 10.1016/j.forsciint.2013.12.030. Epub 2014 Jan 6.
Estimation of the post-mortem interval (PMI, the time interval between death and recovery of a body) can be crucial in solving criminal cases. Today minimum PMI calculations rely mainly on medical and entomological evidence. However, beyond 4-6 weeks even entomological methods become less accurate. Thus additional tools are needed. Cadaveric fluids released by decomposing cadavers modify the soil environment and thus impact soil organisms, which may thus be used to estimate the PMI. Although the response of bacteria or fungi to the presence of a corpse has been studied, to the best of our knowledge nothing is known about other soil organisms. Testate amoebae, a group of shelled protozoa, are sensitive bioindicators of soil physico-chemical and micro-climatic conditions and are therefore good potential PMI indicators. We investigated the response of testate amoebae to three decomposing pig cadavers, and compared the pattern to two controls each, bare soils and fake cadavers, in a beach-oak forest near Neuchâtel, Switzerland. Forest litter samples collected in the three treatments over 10 months were analysed by microscopy. The pig treatment significantly impacted the testate amoeba community: after 22 and 33 days no living amoeba remained underneath the pig cadavers. Communities subsequently recovered but 10 months after the beginning of the experiment recovery was not complete. The fake cadavers also influenced the testate amoeba communities by altering the soil microclimate during a dry hot period, but less than the cadavers. These results confirm the sensitivity of soil testate amoebae to micro-climatic conditions and show that they respond fast to the presence of cadavers - and that this effect although decreasing over time lasts for months, possibly several years. This study therefore confirms that soil protozoa could potentially be useful as forensic indicators, especially in cases with a longer PMI.
死后间隔时间(PMI,即从死亡到尸体被发现的时间间隔)的估计在解决刑事案件中至关重要。目前,PMI 的最小计算主要依赖于医学和昆虫学证据。然而,超过 4-6 周后,即使是昆虫学方法也变得不太准确。因此,需要额外的工具。分解尸体释放的尸体液体改变了土壤环境,从而影响了土壤生物,因此可以用来估计 PMI。尽管已经研究了细菌或真菌对尸体存在的反应,但据我们所知,对于其他土壤生物则一无所知。有壳原生动物,即变形虫,是土壤理化和微气候条件的敏感生物指标,因此是潜在的 PMI 指标。我们研究了变形虫对三具分解猪尸体的反应,并将其与每个两个对照(裸土和假尸体)进行了比较,这些对照在瑞士纳沙泰尔附近的海滩-橡树森林中进行。在三个处理中,在 10 个月内收集的森林凋落物样本通过显微镜进行了分析。猪处理显著影响了变形虫群落:在 22 天和 33 天后,猪尸体下没有活变形虫。群落随后恢复,但在实验开始 10 个月后,恢复仍未完成。假尸体也通过在干燥炎热时期改变土壤小气候来影响变形虫群落,但影响小于尸体。这些结果证实了土壤变形虫对微气候条件的敏感性,并表明它们对尸体的存在反应迅速-而且这种效应虽然随着时间的推移而减弱,但持续数月,可能长达数年。因此,这项研究证实了土壤原生动物作为法医指标具有潜在的用途,特别是在 PMI 较长的情况下。