Arthropod successionin Whitehorse, Yukon Territory and compared development of protophormia terraenovae (R. -D.) from Beringia and the Great Lakes Region

Forensic medicocriminal entomology is used in the estimation of post-mortem intervals in death investigations, by means of arthropod succession patterns and the development rates of individual insect species. The purpose of this research was to determine arthropod succession patterns in Whitehorse,...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bygarski, Katherine
Other Authors: LeBlanc, Helene
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10155/297
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spelling ftuniontinstech:oai:localhost:10155/297 2023-05-15T18:44:10+02:00 Arthropod successionin Whitehorse, Yukon Territory and compared development of protophormia terraenovae (R. -D.) from Beringia and the Great Lakes Region Bygarski, Katherine LeBlanc, Helene 2013-01-18T16:09:11Z application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/10155/297 en eng https://hdl.handle.net/10155/297 Forensic entomology Decomposition Protophormia terraenovae Minimum development threshold Thesis 2013 ftuniontinstech 2023-03-07T13:51:15Z Forensic medicocriminal entomology is used in the estimation of post-mortem intervals in death investigations, by means of arthropod succession patterns and the development rates of individual insect species. The purpose of this research was to determine arthropod succession patterns in Whitehorse, Yukon Territory, and compare the development rates of the dominant blowfly species (Protophormia terraenovae R.-D.) to another population collected in Oshawa, Ontario. Decomposition in Whitehorse occurred at a much slower rate than is expected for the summer season, and the singularly dominant blowfly species is not considered dominant or a primary colonizer in more southern regions. Development rates of P. terraenovae were determined for both fluctuating and two constant temperatures. Under natural fluctuating conditions, there was no significant difference in growth rate between studied biotypes. Results at repeated 10°C conditions varied, though neither biotype completed development indicating the published minimum development thresholds for this species are underestimated. University of Ontario Institute of Technology Thesis Whitehorse Beringia Yukon University of Ontario: e-scholar@UOIT Yukon
institution Open Polar
collection University of Ontario: e-scholar@UOIT
op_collection_id ftuniontinstech
language English
topic Forensic entomology
Decomposition
Protophormia terraenovae
Minimum development threshold
spellingShingle Forensic entomology
Decomposition
Protophormia terraenovae
Minimum development threshold
Bygarski, Katherine
Arthropod successionin Whitehorse, Yukon Territory and compared development of protophormia terraenovae (R. -D.) from Beringia and the Great Lakes Region
topic_facet Forensic entomology
Decomposition
Protophormia terraenovae
Minimum development threshold
description Forensic medicocriminal entomology is used in the estimation of post-mortem intervals in death investigations, by means of arthropod succession patterns and the development rates of individual insect species. The purpose of this research was to determine arthropod succession patterns in Whitehorse, Yukon Territory, and compare the development rates of the dominant blowfly species (Protophormia terraenovae R.-D.) to another population collected in Oshawa, Ontario. Decomposition in Whitehorse occurred at a much slower rate than is expected for the summer season, and the singularly dominant blowfly species is not considered dominant or a primary colonizer in more southern regions. Development rates of P. terraenovae were determined for both fluctuating and two constant temperatures. Under natural fluctuating conditions, there was no significant difference in growth rate between studied biotypes. Results at repeated 10°C conditions varied, though neither biotype completed development indicating the published minimum development thresholds for this species are underestimated. University of Ontario Institute of Technology
author2 LeBlanc, Helene
format Thesis
author Bygarski, Katherine
author_facet Bygarski, Katherine
author_sort Bygarski, Katherine
title Arthropod successionin Whitehorse, Yukon Territory and compared development of protophormia terraenovae (R. -D.) from Beringia and the Great Lakes Region
title_short Arthropod successionin Whitehorse, Yukon Territory and compared development of protophormia terraenovae (R. -D.) from Beringia and the Great Lakes Region
title_full Arthropod successionin Whitehorse, Yukon Territory and compared development of protophormia terraenovae (R. -D.) from Beringia and the Great Lakes Region
title_fullStr Arthropod successionin Whitehorse, Yukon Territory and compared development of protophormia terraenovae (R. -D.) from Beringia and the Great Lakes Region
title_full_unstemmed Arthropod successionin Whitehorse, Yukon Territory and compared development of protophormia terraenovae (R. -D.) from Beringia and the Great Lakes Region
title_sort arthropod successionin whitehorse, yukon territory and compared development of protophormia terraenovae (r. -d.) from beringia and the great lakes region
publishDate 2013
url https://hdl.handle.net/10155/297
geographic Yukon
geographic_facet Yukon
genre Whitehorse
Beringia
Yukon
genre_facet Whitehorse
Beringia
Yukon
op_relation https://hdl.handle.net/10155/297
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