AKA Flesh Flies; adults lay eggs on decaying flesh
The fourth stage of decomposition of an organism where it is starting to dry out; most flesh is gone
Wormlike fly larva
Located in Knoxville, Tennessee is a university research facility to investigate human decomposition under various conditions in order to understand the factors which affect its rate.
The first stage of decomposition when the body is warm, newly dead.
The arrival of the first insects on a dead body
The fifth stage of decomposition where mostly bone remains
A non feeding stage of development between larva and adult
AKA Carpet beetle;
Larvae and adults feed on dry skin and hairs
is a type of metamorphosis in which an insect hatches from an egg and then goes through several nymphal stages. Each nymphal stage looks like a small version of the adult but getting slightly bigger with age.
Wormlike beetle larva
The time between death and discovery of the body
The study of insects another arthropods
Down
The number of hours at an adjusted average temperature it takes for an insect species to develop to a given stage
This insect can smell a dead body within minutes after death up to a mile away.
A predictable sequence of changing species that inhabit a decomposing body
Wormlike stage of an insect development after egg
The interpretation of insect evidence used in civil or criminal investigations
Buries small carcasses to feed on, as well as using the carcass as a feeding nest for its larva.
A therapy more commonly used in Great Britain and Europe than in the U.S. for cleaning up wounds
Depositing, or laying, of eggs
The second stage of decomposition when a corpse emits odors of decaying flesh
Three stages of the larvae
Respiratory organs of insects that are used by researchers to identify a larval stage at first, second, or third instar
The third stage of decomposition when a body emits gases of decay with strong odors, and showing signs of darkened tissue
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