When it comes to the color termite frass differs greatly depending on the kind of wood and cellulose food source ranging from dark brown to beige.
Termite frass termite droppings from ceiling.
This is especially true for homeowners who have know clue what frass looks like.
Homeowners can identify drywood termites using their droppings that are usually originate in the form of pellets.
If you look closer you may notice that a drywood termite pellet has six concave surfaces and rounded ends which makes it similar to a deflate football or an oblonged pea.
When drywood termites infest structural timbers in your ceiling cracks may occur due to the shifting wood.
These piles could be drywood termite droppings known as frass.
Unfortunately if frass is kicked out of a termite burrow in the ceiling or some other place it can fall unto the floor wooden or carpet where it is unlikely to ever be detected.
When they clean out their nest they push these droppings out through holes.
Termite droppings drywood termites leave behind ridged light brown fecal pellets called frass.
Termite droppings is the important sign of the presence of drywood termites.
Unlike sawdust which looks more like small shavings and slivers the frass consists of multicolored light white and dark brown granular pellets.
When two drywood termites establish a small nest in wood they seal the hole they used to enter the wood and do not leave the nest.
The peculiarity of the drywood termite is frass fecal droppings of termites.
Mysterious piles of pellets are indicative of drywood termite presence.
So there would be small black marks and dark substances which would result into the termite droppings.
Piles of wings or mud tubes.
Drywood termites typically leave few signs of activity in homes.