At a glance
This is the connection most homeowners make too late. Roof rats are the most common attic pest in South Florida, and fruit trees are their primary food source and travel infrastructure.
A mango tree with branches touching or overhanging the roofline gives roof rats a direct pathway from the canopy to your soffit. UF/IFAS documents roof rats as strongly associated with residential fruit trees in South Florida, with populations concentrated in neighborhoods with mature mango, avocado, and citrus canopy.
Fallen fruit on the ground feeds the population. Fruit left on the tree feeds the population. The dense canopy provides daytime shelter. The branches provide the highway to your roof.
Trimming branches to maintain a three-foot gap between the canopy and the roofline is the single most effective thing a South Florida homeowner with fruit trees can do for rodent prevention. Picking up fallen fruit daily is the second.
This breaks the roof rat highway. Trim annually or more often for fast-growing species.
Fruit on the ground feeds rats, ants, raccoons, and opossums. Removing it daily eliminates the ground-level food source.
Reduce the moisture-rich harborage zone that supports ground-nesting pests near your foundation.
A band of non-repellent product applied to the trunk intercepts the ant highway between soil and canopy without harming the tree.
New plantings should maintain this distance. Existing trees closer than ten feet benefit from aggressive canopy management and perimeter pest treatment.
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