Tell-tale bugs
“From 10 to 50 hours [after death], it’s basically a wild guess,” says Lents. That’s why forensic entomologists—who study the insects that accompany decomposition—are so important. After the first several hours, bodies begin to decay at different rates, depending on a myriad of factors, including the prior health of the victim.
Forensic entomologists look at which critters have been feeding on the dead, and for how long. If they can determine a time when insect colonization occurred, it can help them infer time of death.
The first bugs attracted to a dead body? Blowflies, says Lauren Weidner, a forensic entomologist and lecturer at Purdue University. If they have easy access to a body (i.e. outdoors or with an open window, in agreeable weather, during the daytime), Weidner says “insects can arrive within minutes and then colonize within the hour.” The blowflies will lay tiny eggs in batches, usually in orifices or in a wound. After 15 to 26 hours, the eggs hatch into tiny maggots that feed for days.
By the fourth day, the maggots will migrate and enter cocoon-like pupae in dry areas away from the body, which is still wet and thus attracts other insects that might prey on the vulnerable pupae. From the pupae come the next cycle of blowflies. By measuring where the blowflies are in this life cycle (e.g. the approximate age of a feeding maggot), forensic entomologists can work backward to determine the minimum time since colonization—and thus death.
Then comes bloat
Once the body reaches the bloating stage, the critters consuming the body change again.
“That would be four to five days on nice warm summer days,” says Lents. “By then your margin of error is measured in days—even [a] couple of days.” The body bloats as a byproduct of bacterial activity in the organs, leading to an accumulation of gases. Lents is researching how measuring skin bacteria can help investigators get narrow windows weeks after death. Others have homed in on bacteria in the small intestine.
“I’ve used bacteria to get a two-day window, out to about six weeks,” he says. “You’re pretty deep into decomposition by that point.” As of yet, study of bloat-related bacteria isn’t far enough along to be used in investigations, but Lents is optimistic that that will change soon.
Once the body has reached the bloat stage, the succession of insect begins to show hints. In bloat, blowflies will leave and house flies begin to colonize. Dermestid beetles (also known as skin beetles) will arrive at the body later still, once it has begun to dry out.
By that point, the body has been dead for weeks, going on months.
“Sometimes museums use [the beetles] to clean bones,” Weidner explains. Still, she says, even after a body is picked clean, forensic entomologists can still be of use. That’s because different insects are present in different geographic areas depending on the time of year. Investigators can glean information by looking at the corpses of the flies themselves: If the flies that fed, pupated and hatched in the room are only in the area in the summer, then it’s reasonable to assume that the body died in the summer.
“If insects were there,” Weidner says, “then entomologists can be relevant.”