| All | Since 2020 | |
| Citation | 105 | 60 |
| h-index | 4 | 4 |
| i10-index | 3 | 2 |
WJAHR Citation 
Login
News & Updation
Best Article Awards
World Journal of Advance Healthcare Research (WJAHR) is giving Best Article Award in every Issue for Best Article and Issue Certificate of Appreciation to the Authors to promote research activity of scholar.
Best Article of current issue
Download Article : Click here
Indexing
Abstract
THIRD-INSTAR LARVAE OF FORENSICALLY IMPORTANT INSECTS AS A TOOL FOR ESTIMATING THE MINIMUM POST-MORTEM INTERVAL IN DOG CARCASSES UNDER HIGH SUMMER TEMPERATURES IN SOUTHERN IRAQ
Rawaa Shakir Al-Rubaie, *Habeeb Waseel Kadhum Shubber
ABSTRACT
Forensic entomology applies knowledge of insect biology to medico-legal investigations, most critically for estimating the minimum post-mortem interval (PMImin) when conventional pathological methods become unreliable. This study evaluated third-instar larval development and the accumulated degree hours (ADH) method for estimating PMImin in dog (Canis lupus familiaris) carcasses under the extreme summer temperatures of Al-Diwaniyah, Southern Iraq (43 °C). Twelve carcasses were studied across two contrasting habitats — an agricultural area and a cemetery — with three carcasses placed on the ground surface and three buried at 50 cm depth in each habitat. Four forensically important species were recorded across all groups: Calliphora vicina, Calliphora vomitoria, Chrysomya megacephala, and Chrysomya albiceps. PMImin estimates for surface carcasses ranged from 8.143 h (C. vicina, cemetery) to 11.000 h (C. vomitoria, cemetery surface). For buried carcasses, estimates ranged from 12.727 h (C. vicina and C. megacephala, cemetery buried) to 20.727 h (C. megacephala, agricultural buried). Burial at 50 cm consistently and substantially increased PMImin relative to surface carcasses. Cemetery surface carcasses yielded marginally higher estimates than agricultural ones for shared species, reflecting habitat-level microclimatic differences. Calliphora vicina consistently produced the earliest estimates, confirming its value as the closest entomological indicator of the time of death. The findings demonstrate that third-instar larvae are reliable biological clocks for PMImin estimation in hot-climate Iraq and that both burial depth and habitat type materially affect entomological estimates.
[Full Text Article] [Download Certificate]