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.
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
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