It's the word of the day for December 21st.
Today's word is hibernaculum, spelled H-I-B-E-R-N-A-C-U-L-U-M.
Hibernaculum is a noun.
Its plural is hibernacula.
It refers to a shelter occupied during the winter by a dormant animal,
such as an insect, snake, bat, or marmot.
Here's the word used in a sentence from the Shawnee News star.
Adult female bees begin looking for a hibernation location or hibernaculum in the fall.
If the gardener is planning to deadhead any spent flowers from the summer,
aim to prune stems at varying heights, 8 inches to 24 inches, as a nesting site for these bees.
Many perennial flowers and shrubs have pithy stems that will serve as a good location.
A few common Oklahoma garden plants that are good candidates include roses,
purple cone flower, salvia, bee balm, and sunflowers.
If you're afraid of snakes or bats, you probably won't enjoy thinking about hibernacula,
where hundreds, even thousands of these creatures might be passing the wintery months.
Other creatures also use hibernacula, though many of these tend to be less crowded.
The word hibernaculum has been used for the burrow of a woodchuck, for instance,
as well as for a cozy caterpillar cocoon attached to a wintry twig and for the spot in which a frog has buried itself in mud.
Hibernacula are all around us and have been around for a long, long time,
but we've only called them such since the late 1700s,