You’re cleaning your daughter’s room—and freeze.
On the floor: two small piles of brown, gritty, shell-like debris. No smell. No movement. Just… there.
Your mind races: Is it mold? Insects? Something worse?
This exact scenario sent one parent into a panic—and sparked a viral online frenzy with over 150,000 reactions. But before you call an exterminator or scrub the walls, take a breath.
In most cases, the culprit is harmless, common, and easily fixed.
🔍 The Most Likely Culprit: Drywood Termite Frass
Those “piles of tiny shells” are almost certainly termite frass—the scientific term for termite droppings.
Specifically, they point to drywood termites, which:
Live inside wood (not soil)
Don’t build mud tubes like subterranean termites
Push out hexagonal, granular pellets through small “kick-out holes”
Leave neat piles that look like coarse sand, coffee grounds, or sawdust
🐜 Key clue: The pellets are uniform in size, hard, and often found near windowsills, door frames, or wooden furniture.
❓ Why Is It in a Bedroom?
