S. Moran, EFFICACY OF THE REPELLENT RO-PEL(R) IN REDUCING DAMAGE BY THE ROCK HYRAX (PROCAVIA-CAPENSIS) TO FRUIT-TREES, International journal of pest management, 42(4), 1996, pp. 273-276
The rock hyrax (Procavia capensis) lives in Israel in natural crevices
of rocky terrain and in long heaps or terraces of rocks that were upr
ooted in the process of rocky ground reclamation and dumped around new
ly-planted fruit orchards. The hyraxes browse on rows of deciduous and
subtropical fruit trees adjacent to the animals' rocky shelter. Fruit
trees thereby lose most of their leaves, and branches or stems of see
dlings are bent and broken under the weight of the animals. The commer
cial repellent, RO-PEL(R), was tested in probe and field trials. RO-PE
L(R)-sprayed and unsprayed avocado and mango seedlings were placed in
a pen into which three hyraxes were introduced. Most of the leaves of
both sprayed and unsprayed seedlings were consumed in 4 and 11 days (a
vocado and mango seedlings respectively). However, a field trial was c
onducted in a citrus orchard, in which the rows of seedlings adjacent
to rock terraces had been damaged by the hyraxes. On the sprayed and t
he unsprayed seedlings the leaves were counted during the experiments;
there was a significant difference in the numbers of sprayed and unsp
rayed leaves consumed (P = 0.01), with reduction of the damage on the
sprayed trees being 42.6%. Later, when new leaves had sprouted, the hy
raxes consumed the leaves irrespective of whether they had or had not
been sprayed. Consequently the feasibility of using RO-PEL(R) to repel
the rock hyrax remains problematic.