I would think so. The honey can be used to keep their hair down if they wish.
Wax
Bumble bees do not have honey pots, the keep their honey in honey combs.
Honey combs are made of wax; both the honey and the wax are ultimately made from the nectar and the pollen that bees collect from flowers.
Harvesting honey involves removing combs from hives, which can disturb bees. However, when done carefully and responsibly, it doesn't necessarily kill the bees. Beekeepers aim to minimize harm to the bees during the process.
The bees make the combs from wax which is produced from special glands in their bodies specifically for this purpose.
If honey bees are living in the wild in a colony, they leave enough space between the combs that they build to allow free passage through the combs. If they live in a hive supplied by a beekeeper, enough 'bee space' is allowed in the manufacture of frames to allow the bees to move freely within the hive.
this make it easier for the honey to remain in the honeycomb and the bees find it easier to make honey
Honey bees create honeycombs by secreting beeswax from glands on their abdomen. They then mold the beeswax into the hexagonal cells of the comb using their mouths and legs. The comb serves as a storage unit for honey, pollen, and eggs within the hive.
No. Are you?
No.
They are females that make the nest. They form beeswax by secreting wax from their bodies and mix it with their saliva to build the combs from top to bottom.
I would fog it. You can use a dust but fog is safer since no residue afterwards. you need to know where the comb is before you do anything. Without the bees it's going to melt.