Experimental evaluation on the applicability of necrobiome analysis in forensic veterinary science

Abstract Despite the wide usage of animals as models in forensic studies, the investigations of fundamental legal questions involving domesticated and nondomesticated animals were always given marginal attention compared to “human forensic,” and only recently the interest in the discipline is increa...

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Main Authors: Fabiola Tuccia, Emad Zurgani, Sara Bortolini, Stefano Vanin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2019-09-01
Series:MicrobiologyOpen
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/mbo3.828
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spelling doaj-462dd1ec1d9444c9926a037ff611a5002020-11-24T21:39:31ZengWileyMicrobiologyOpen2045-88272019-09-0189n/an/a10.1002/mbo3.828Experimental evaluation on the applicability of necrobiome analysis in forensic veterinary scienceFabiola Tuccia0Emad Zurgani1Sara Bortolini2Stefano Vanin3Department of Biological and Geographical Sciences, School of Applied Sciences University of Huddersfield Huddersfield United KingdomDepartment of Biological and Geographical Sciences, School of Applied Sciences University of Huddersfield Huddersfield United KingdomDepartment of Life Sciences University of Modena and Reggio Emilia Reggio Emilia ItalyDepartment of Biological and Geographical Sciences, School of Applied Sciences University of Huddersfield Huddersfield United KingdomAbstract Despite the wide usage of animals as models in forensic studies, the investigations of fundamental legal questions involving domesticated and nondomesticated animals were always given marginal attention compared to “human forensic,” and only recently the interest in the discipline is increasing. Our research focuses on the effect of the fur coat on the activity and development of microbial decomposers. In order to test this variable never assessed before, rabbit carcasses were used and results show that: (i) distinct and significant temporal changes in terms of metabolic activity and taxa distribution can be tracked over the decomposition process; (ii) the richness and the diversity of the bacterial communities does not significantly vary over time, but it does not mean that the species Operational Taxonomic Units (OTUs) do not change; (iii) the presence/absence of the fur on the carcasses does not significantly affect either the bacterial communities’ functional activity or the diversity intra‐ and intercommunity, neither at phylum nor at family resolution; (iv) the functional activity and the ecological diversity of the bacterial communities are significantly affected by the body region, while the relative abundance is not. Obtained data confirm previous observations and provide new insight in the Forensic Veterinary field in terms of equally using them in order to derive a statistical model for the PMI estimation. As a future perspective, a contribution to the Forensic Entomology approach will be given in legal investigations when domestic or wild animals are involved, regardless of the presence of a hair layer.https://doi.org/10.1002/mbo3.828forensic microbiologyforensic veterinarynecrobiomepostmortem microbiome
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fabiola Tuccia
Emad Zurgani
Sara Bortolini
Stefano Vanin
spellingShingle Fabiola Tuccia
Emad Zurgani
Sara Bortolini
Stefano Vanin
Experimental evaluation on the applicability of necrobiome analysis in forensic veterinary science
MicrobiologyOpen
forensic microbiology
forensic veterinary
necrobiome
postmortem microbiome
author_facet Fabiola Tuccia
Emad Zurgani
Sara Bortolini
Stefano Vanin
author_sort Fabiola Tuccia
title Experimental evaluation on the applicability of necrobiome analysis in forensic veterinary science
title_short Experimental evaluation on the applicability of necrobiome analysis in forensic veterinary science
title_full Experimental evaluation on the applicability of necrobiome analysis in forensic veterinary science
title_fullStr Experimental evaluation on the applicability of necrobiome analysis in forensic veterinary science
title_full_unstemmed Experimental evaluation on the applicability of necrobiome analysis in forensic veterinary science
title_sort experimental evaluation on the applicability of necrobiome analysis in forensic veterinary science
publisher Wiley
series MicrobiologyOpen
issn 2045-8827
publishDate 2019-09-01
description Abstract Despite the wide usage of animals as models in forensic studies, the investigations of fundamental legal questions involving domesticated and nondomesticated animals were always given marginal attention compared to “human forensic,” and only recently the interest in the discipline is increasing. Our research focuses on the effect of the fur coat on the activity and development of microbial decomposers. In order to test this variable never assessed before, rabbit carcasses were used and results show that: (i) distinct and significant temporal changes in terms of metabolic activity and taxa distribution can be tracked over the decomposition process; (ii) the richness and the diversity of the bacterial communities does not significantly vary over time, but it does not mean that the species Operational Taxonomic Units (OTUs) do not change; (iii) the presence/absence of the fur on the carcasses does not significantly affect either the bacterial communities’ functional activity or the diversity intra‐ and intercommunity, neither at phylum nor at family resolution; (iv) the functional activity and the ecological diversity of the bacterial communities are significantly affected by the body region, while the relative abundance is not. Obtained data confirm previous observations and provide new insight in the Forensic Veterinary field in terms of equally using them in order to derive a statistical model for the PMI estimation. As a future perspective, a contribution to the Forensic Entomology approach will be given in legal investigations when domestic or wild animals are involved, regardless of the presence of a hair layer.
topic forensic microbiology
forensic veterinary
necrobiome
postmortem microbiome
url https://doi.org/10.1002/mbo3.828
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