semi-hibernation

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English

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Etymology

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From semi- +‎ hibernation.

Noun

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semi-hibernation (plural semi-hibernations)

  1. (biology) A state of reduced power consumption, and metabolic activity in animals during winter, but to a lesser degree than true hibernation.
    • 1914, Samuel Simmins, A Modern Bee-farm and Its Economic Management, page 111:
      Should a warm day soon follow this untoward excitement, the after effects are to a certain extent modified, as a good cleansing flight can be taken; but when the cold still continues, the bees never again being able to regain their former state of semi-hibernation, drag out their existence wandering aimlessly about, and die at a rapid rate each day adding to the accumulating filth of the hive.
    • 2009 September 23, G. E. W. Wolstenholme, Maeve O'Connor, editors, The Nature of Sleep, Wiley, page 321:
      They are fed exclusively on insects which are caught on the wing by the parents; if there is a spell of bad weather the parents cannot collect their insects, the young swifts starve, lose their temperature regulation and go into a sort of semi-hibernation at a very low body temperature.