Samantha Sawyer
Education and Training
- Postdoctoral Training, The Emerging Pathogens Institute and the Department of Geography, University of Florida
- Ph.D., Entomology, Texas A&M University
- B.S., Biological Sciences, Bridgewater State University
About Samantha
Dr. Sawyer is a board-certified Forensic Entomologist and principal investigator of the Decomposition and Theoretical (D.E.A.T.H.) Ecology Laboratory. Dr. Sawyer started private consulting in cases of death, neglect, and abuse involving insect evidence in 2017 and became board certified in 2021. She has worked with local, state, and federal law enforcement agencies as well as private parties, veterinarians, and attorneys to provide forensically important timelines and context to investigations involving insect evidence. In addition, Dr. Sawyer has consulted in cases involving environmental contamination. Dr. Sawyer regularly runs workshops to teach personnel how to collect entomological evidence during investigations to improve the quality of entomological reports.
In her graduate studies, Dr. Sawyer studied the role of mass mortality events on ecosystem structure and function as well as the competition between vertebrate and invertebrate scavengers for carrion resources. During her time, she developed a mathematical model to predict scavenger population outcomes from mass casualty events. As part of her postdoctoral work, she applied this mathematical model to estimate the amplification potential of Bacillus anthracis (the causative agent of Anthrax) by necrophagous flies following a mass die off to assess health risks to humans, domestic, and non-domestic animals. She has since written a chapter in the second edition of the textbook Carrion Ecology, Evolution, and Their Applications on aggregated mortality events and their roles in ecosystem function and health.