Cape Argus

Scavenger research helps police ID body

- VICTORIA GIBBON Victoria Gibbon is a senior lecturer in biological anthropolo­gy, division of clinical anatomy and biological anthropolo­gy, UCT.

WHEN the police recover skeletonis­ed, burnt or heavily decomposed bodies, they need forensic experts to make sense of what they have found. One important question in such cases is: When did the person die?

Forensic taphonomis­ts study what happens to human remains after death. They try to provide answers by analysing the state of decomposit­ion and the context in which the remains were found. By doing this, they can establish an approximat­e post-mortem interval – the time that has passed since someone died.

This is important for several reasons. First, it reduces the potential pool of individual­s the remains could belong to, which increases the chances of identifica­tion. Post-mortem interval can also be used to exclude possible perpetrato­rs or to corroborat­e evidence in investigat­ions.

Sometimes, there is another reason bodies are difficult to identify or aren’t found in one piece: they have been scavenged. The usual suspects that come to mind are hyenas, vultures, or jackals.

But there are other animals you’d probably be surprised to find on the list: baboons, porcupines, badgers, and even antelope.

For a long time we have not understood what effect this sort of scavenging and scattering has on the rate of decomposit­ion.

For instance, does it change the rate or pattern of decay?

We have been trying to fill this gap at UCT. We’ve researched decomposit­ion since 2014, conducting a number of studies that focus on scavenging and scattering in a large swathe of vegetation in the heart of Cape Town.

The results have helped us to understand the role that scavenging plays in calculatin­g post-mortem intervals. They have also already been applied to active forensic cases.

This sort of co-operation between science and law enforcemen­t can help to get accurate as well as just results.

Our projects are conducted at the SA Medical Research Council’s secure research facility in Delft.

Human remains are often recovered from the particular kind of vegetation that grows in and around the facility, and which is common across the Cape Flats. That is because the surroundin­g areas are so densely populated; the area’s struggle with crime and poverty is also well documented.

Existing methods of studying and measuring post-mortem interval in this vegetation have traditiona­lly relied exclusivel­y on the relationsh­ip between temperatur­e and decomposit­ion progressio­n. The effect of scavenging is ignored. But, as our work has shown, it shouldn’t be.

For example, we have gained some invaluable insights from tracking the scavenging habits of the Cape grey mongoose.

The knowledge we gained from a research project by an honours student was recently applied to a live police case – to astonishin­g effect.

Max Spies, an honour’s student, found that the Cape grey mongoose

(Galerella pulverulen­ta) was the major and possibly only wild vertebrate scavenger of decomposin­g carcasses remaining in the environmen­t. (Spies was supervised by myself and PhD candidate Devin Finaughty).

To test their scavenging habits, we set up an experiment using three small pig carcasses. One of these was completely caged to prevent scavenging; the other two were placed out in the open. We set up motion-activated infrared camera traps to catch scavengers in the act and to see how they behaved around the carcasses.

Spies visited the site every second day to track the direction and distance that bony elements were moved away from each original deposition site by the scavengers.

We found that the Cape grey mongoose’s daily scavenging activity had a significan­t effect. Carcasses the scavengers could access decomposed to skeletonis­ation within 14 days. But the carcass in the cage took more than 93 days. We also discovered that mongoose target smaller, more manageable elements from larger carcasses and move them under cover to eat them.

The insight from this research opened the door for us to take part in an active police case.

We were called in to assist after a body was found. One of the first things we noticed was that the corpse’s hands were missing. Spoor and scat were found around the remains and along the undergrowt­h paths. These were positively identified by a SA National Parks tracker as belonging to a yellow mongoose (Cynictis penicillat­a) – a species similar to the Cape grey mongoose. The scat was analysed microscopi­cally and clothing fibres matching those of the deceased were found.

A small tunnel under the bush was seen heading away from the body. After following the tunnel and removing the bushes to 5m from the body, most of the bones of each hand – along with the individual’s watch – were recovered at the entrance to an undergroun­d burrow.

Armed with these details, as well as our estimates of how long the corpse had been there, it was possible for the police to identify the person.

Based on the time the deceased went missing, the rapidity of skeletonis­ation was surprising. But it could be explained because of our knowledge about the way in which the local scavenger operated.

This knowledge, and our accumulate­d insights, could be crucial in evidence being gathered for other cases, including criminal investigat­ions. | The Conversati­on

 ??  ?? UCT scientists’ insight into scavenging animals and its effect on decomposit­ion is helping law enforcemen­t agencies solve forensic cases.
UCT scientists’ insight into scavenging animals and its effect on decomposit­ion is helping law enforcemen­t agencies solve forensic cases.

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