⚡ Breaking
Technology: 7 Best Shower Filters of 2026 Are WIRED-Tested and -ApprovedTechnology: Sony Inzone H6 Air Review: Comfortable Headphones, Great SoundWorld: Two trains collide head-on in Denmark, leaving four critically hurtSports: How Russell is surprising himself in title race – and the positives of F1’s new rulesScience: Scientists discover hidden forces are warping Earth deep beneath the surfaceSports: McDermott to lead England into World CupTechnology: Verizon Promo Codes: $200 Verizon Gift Cards | April 2026World: US Navy chief leaving post ‘effective immediately’, Pentagon saysTechnology: 7 Best Shower Filters of 2026 Are WIRED-Tested and -ApprovedTechnology: Sony Inzone H6 Air Review: Comfortable Headphones, Great SoundWorld: Two trains collide head-on in Denmark, leaving four critically hurtSports: How Russell is surprising himself in title race – and the positives of F1’s new rulesScience: Scientists discover hidden forces are warping Earth deep beneath the surfaceSports: McDermott to lead England into World CupTechnology: Verizon Promo Codes: $200 Verizon Gift Cards | April 2026World: US Navy chief leaving post ‘effective immediately’, Pentagon says
Science

95% success rate: This new trick lures termites straight to their death

Scientists at UC Riverside have found a clever new way to outsmart termites—by turning their own instincts against them. Using a natural pine scent called pinene, which smells like food to termites, researchers can lure the pests straight toward a targeted dose of insecticide hidden in wood. The result is dramatically higher kill rates—jumping from about 70% to over 95%—without the need for widespread toxic fumigation.

📰 Source Attribution: This article is based on reporting by ScienceDaily. HotTakeDaily summarises and links to original journalism. Full credit to original reporters and publishers.
Share: 𝕏 Twitter Facebook WhatsApp LinkedIn
More

Related Stories