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فهد عبده أحمد المخلافي

Associate Professor

قسم علم الحيوان

كلية العلوم
مبنى 5 الدور الأرضي رقم المكتب أب 75/1
المنشورات
مقال فى مجلة
2016

Differential Diptera Succession Patterns on Decomposed Rabbit Carcasses in Three Different Habitats

This study describes for the first time the necrophagous Diptera attracted to rabbit carcasses in three distinct
habitats in Riyadh, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA). A mean number of 1,427 flies belonging to 8 families and
16 species were collected during the decomposition process of the rabbits at the three different sites. Carcasses
in the agricultural habitat attracted 1,146 flies from 7 families and 14 species, compared to carcasses in the
urban site, which attracted 249 flies from 5 families and 9 species. Carcasses in the desert site attracted the lowest
number (28 flies from 4 families and 5 species). In the agricultural and desert sites, flies were represented at
all decomposition stages. Also, in the urban site, flies were represented at all stages except the fresh and dry
stages. Lucilia sericata Meigen was the most abundant species occurring in both the agricultural and desert
sites, while Musca domestica L. was the most abundant species occurring in the urban site. The evidence presented
here, therefore, suggests that L. sericata and M. domestica are potentially useful species for estimating
minimal postmortem intervals in this region of KSA.

رقم المجلد
53
مجلة/صحيفة
J Med Entomol
الصفحات
1192-1197
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