ABSTRACT
Carcasses represent a trophic and reproductive resource or shelter for arthropods, which are a representative component of the decomposition process. Four experiments, one per season, were conducted in a semi-rural area of Bahía Blanca, Argentina, to study the trophic roles of cadaveric beetles, evaluating the abundance, composition and dominance during all decomposition stages and seasons. Species of necrophagous, necrophilous and omnivorous habits were found. Abundance, composition and dominance of beetles in relation to their trophic roles changed according to seasons and decomposition stages. Guilds and patterns of succession were established in relation to those periods. Trophic roles could be an indicator of beetle associations with decomposition stages and seasons.
ABSTRACT
Un paciente, adulto, masculino, presentaba al momento de la consulta una severa infestación por Pediculus humanus capitis y una lesión en la cabeza de donde emergían larvas. El material extraído de la herida del paciente correspondió a Cochliomyia hominivorax. En este caso clínico, las lesiones producidas por el rascado del propio paciente permitieron atraer moscas C. hominivorax las que depositaron sus huevos en ellas de donde eclosionaron sus larvas que ocasionaron la miasis cutánea.