yep
the honey comb is made out of wax
the honey is in the honey comb
To remove honey from a honeycomb, you can cut the comb out of the beehive and then place it in a centrifuge, which spins the comb to extract the honey. Another method is to crush the comb and then strain it through a fine mesh to separate the honey from the wax.
An honey comb
The comb itself is beeswax which has no significant nutritional value. The honey and pollen it may contain may have low levels of vitamins, the highest of which would be a small amount of ascorbic acid (vitamin C) in honey from flowers of the citrus family.
The amount of honey in one comb of honey can vary significantly depending on the size of the comb and the bee species. On average, a standard honeycomb can contain between 1 to 2 pounds (about 450 to 900 grams) of honey. However, larger or more developed combs may hold even more. The honey is stored in hexagonal wax cells that bees build as part of their hive structure.
Could it be honey??
no
The honey bee makes comb out of wax which will allow the queen to lay eggs in the comb cells. Some cells are used to store honey and others to store pollen.
It is called an extractor. It spins and the honey is extracted from the honey comb.
No. only if there is honey in that comb. the wax its self will not make any difference. the honey is what becomes bad for humans.
There are approximately 93 calories in one ounce of all natural comb honey. Honey is definitely not a calorie dense food.
The honeybee does not deposit honey. The bee deposits nectar collected from flowers, (regurgatated as liquid spit) into the comb. It sits on the bottom of the comb and the bees flutter their wings to evaporate the water out until it is the consistency of honey as we know it.
No, they store it in a comb to eat later.