Honey bees also have an organ for digestion called the ventriculus or mid-gut. But the mid-gut occurs after the honey stomach and is separated from it by the proventriculus which is a muscular organ that regulates the opening between these two parts of the alimentary canal. read more
The subject is whether or not honey is bee poop, and I try to stay on point whenever possible. In any case, even though bees add enzymes to nectar in the honey stomach, the nectar never gets into the digesting stomach so I don’t consider honey production as part of the digestion process. read more
Bee poop and honey are completely different things. Poop, obviously, is the waste products from what they eat. Honey is a substance bees make from flower nectar, and use as a food source. However, the process of making honey does involve eating it, then throwing it back up. read more
Best Answer: Nope it's not made from bee poop 'Nectar contains about 80% water, along with complex sugars. Left in its natural state, nectar would ferment. In order to store the sugars in a usable and efficient state, bees convert the nectar into honey. Honey contains only 14-18% water. read more
Honey Bee Suite is dedicated to honey bees, beekeeping, wild bees, other pollinators, and pollination ecology. It is designed to be informative and fun, but also to remind readers that pollinators throughout the world are endangered. read more
Bee poop and honey are completely different things. Poop, obviously, is the waste products from what they eat. Honey is a substance bees make from flower nectar, and use as a food source. However, the process of making honey does involve eating it, then throwing it back up. So I guess you could call it bee vomit. read more