IMHSI’s Grayanotoxin Risk Mapping project is a multi-region field and laboratory program designed to characterize how grayanotoxin (GTX) profiles and levels vary across Himalayan harvesting zones.
By documenting variability across districts, altitude bands, and seasonal harvest windows, this work supports clearer verification definitions, improved trade documentation, and more consistent safety communication, without relying on vague “lab tested” claims.
Mad Honey may contain naturally occurring grayanotoxins (GTX) associated with specific nectar sources. The challenge is not the existence of GTX, it is unverified variability.
When batches are traded without documented GTX profiles, stakeholders face predictable risk:
• inconsistent expectations and dosing ambiguity
• reduced buyer confidence in authenticity
• increased compliance friction for export and premium retail
• higher reputational exposure when claims cannot be verified
Risk mapping converts uncertainty into documented ranges and verification scope.
IMHSI focuses on verification and documentation standards. This project does not make medical claims.
Partner disclosures are published in accordance with IMHSI independence and conflict-of-interest policies.
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