Milligrams (thousandths of a gram) not grams!
So you do agree that oxalic acid is toxic?
Well done.
Dose is important.
...
It is harmless to eat carrots or honey as levels of oxalic acid are low. But you can also say they are harmless because the water content will not intoxicate you either.
No, you take a look at the UK law
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2015/1348/pdfs/uksi_20151348_en.pdf
Specifically Schedule 1 which gives "Compositional Criteria" (you will have to scroll down).
Natural levels of Oxalic in honey are indeed harmless.
However, I'm not sure that would still be the case after vaporising 12g or more (3g times 4, maybe more, treatments at about 5 day intervals) into a hive with crop supers in place.
Eating the honey wouldn't kill you - nobody has claimed that - but the question remains as to whether that concentration could produce harmful effects (similar to arthritis or gout) after eating the honey.
Regardless of the legalities, I'd rather keep such materials out of my honey crop, even though I'd use them when there was no crop to contaminate.
Really needs to be tested which it appears nobody has done.
What you do with your own honey is your choice but your problems would be metabolic rather that getting gout or arthritis if it did contain too much oxalic acid.
Repeat Oxalic vaporising - but while there is honey on the hive.
Oxalic doesn't evaporate away like the Formic in MAQS.
So this strikes me as a REALLY BAD idea, with 3 crop supers in place.
But how can I convince an Oxalic vaporising enthusiast of that?
Or is it OK really and you've done it and got away with it?
Let's do some maths...
say a dose of 1gm of oxalic is vapourised.
say 25% is absorbed into the 3 honey supers.
A super holds 25lb of honey so there will be 0.25gm in 75lb of honey,
which is 0.003gm of oxalic in a 1lb jar
That concentration is 0.003/454*100 = 0.0006608% by weight
To allow for variations in concentration (although the honey extraction & filtering process will tend to physically mix the oxalic more evenly) say the concentration in any one jar could be 20x the average.
There are approx 64 teaspoons of honey in a 1lb jar.
Given that an average daily consumption is no more than a few spoons of honey per day per person, say daily consumption is 8 teaspoons, or 0.125lb.
That concentration of oxalic in honey is 0.0006608% by weight
or 8 teaspoons would give a daily consumption of 0.003g of oxalic.
Would that be dangerous?
or not worth worryng about?
The natural concentration of oxalic acid (oxalates) based on fresh weight in spinach is 0.3-1.2%, in rhubarb 0.2-1.3%, in tea 0.3-2.0%, and in cocoa 0.5-0.9%
lots of non-experimental assumptions but even if my numbers are a factor of 1,000 out, it wouldn't be any more concentrated than in spinach or rhubarb.
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But those researches were connected to trickling method to verify that it is safe to human health.
It is very different method to cover the hive interior with oxalic acid fog during yield season and repeated time. Those chemical methods are meant to use when honey crop is out if hive, including formic acid and thymol.
I wonder who is so brave that he would recommend repeated fumigination in the middle of summer?
You are contradicting yourself and don't seem to be able to find the research to back up your earlier post. Not very impressive or convincing. This is what irritates people about your contributions.
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