Developmental data for necrophagous Diptera are frequently used in medico-legal investigations to estimate portions of the postmortem interval and interpret periods of insect activity. These applications require baseline developmental data for local populations from geographic locations of interest. For the widely distributed blow fly Calliphora vicina Robineau-Desvoidy (Diptera: Calliphoridae), detailed developmental data does not exist for many locations in the mid-Atlantic region of the United States. This study examined development of C. vicina collected from a large, metropolitan city (Baltimore) in Maryland utilizing 11 ambient temperatures. The developmental threshold and thermal range of growth and tolerance were also estimated, as well as critical thermal minima and maxima based on thermal injury. For this population, linear growth was observed between 10°C and 25°C, whereas flies failed to complete development at temperatures below 7°C or above 28°C. Growth at low temperatures was not curvilinear, which contrasts with other developmental studies using C. vicina and other calliphorids. The lower developmental threshold was estimated to be 5.9°C and corresponds closely with experimental observations. The implications of these result in reference to phenotypic plasticity in populations of C. vicina and applications in forensic entomology are discussed.
Keywords: development rate; forensic entomology; low temperature injury; postmortem interval; temperature threshold.
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