1.Preliminary observation on the lepidopteran colonization on rat and rabbit carcasses in Malaysia
Singh, S. ; Yong, S.K. ; Jalaludin, N.H. ; Brau, E. ; Shamsudin, N.N. ; Keawbaingam, N. ; Heo, C.C.
Tropical Biomedicine 2020;37(No.4):1146-1151
The immature stages of necrophagous insects such as Diptera and Coleoptera play
a vital ecological role in carrion decomposition. These invertebrates reduce the necromass
significantly through consumption and recycle nutrients into organic forms which are readily
being used by autotrophs or served as an abiotic storage in the soil ecosystem. Fly and beetle
larvae are frequently encountered decomposers on ephemeral resource patches; however,
lepidopterans associated with carrion decomposition is seldom reported. Here, we report
colonization of Monopis sp. (Tineidae) and an unknown species of Psychidae on a rat carcass,
and a Lithosiini caterpillar (Arctiidae) on a rabbit carcass in Peninsular Malaysia for the first
time. The feeding behaviour and their potential forensic implications are discussed.
2.First observation of Afromorgus chinensis (boheman, 1858) (Coleoptera: Trogidae) on a rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus L., 1758) carcass and its implications in forensic entomology
Singh, S. ; Yong, S.K. ; Rahimi, R. ; Singh, M.K.C. ; Low, V.L. ; Pittino, R. ; Heo, C.C.
Tropical Biomedicine 2023;40(No.3):370-374
Beetles (Coleoptera) are known to constitute forensic evidence in medico-legal investigations as their
presence can be used to date human remains in almost all decomposition stages. Many forensic studies
focus on the successional colonization pattern of flies (Diptera); however, beetles have not so far
been studied extensively for this aspect. A beetle of the genus Afromorgus Scholtz, 1986, A. chinensis
(Boheman, 1858) (Scarabaeoidea: Trogidae), was found beneath a late decaying rabbit carcass at Paya
Indah Wetland, Dengkil, Malaysia, for the first time. Both genus and species are already known to occur
in Malaysia from literature.