ACCLIMATING - meaning and definition. What is ACCLIMATING
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What (who) is ACCLIMATING - definition

BIOLOGICAL ADJUSTMENT TO NEW CLIMATES
Acclimitization; Acclimation; Acclimatisation; Acclimating; Acclimate; Acclimatize; Acclimatation; Acclimatized; Acclimitisation; Acclimatise; Getting used to

Acclimating         
·p.pr. & ·vb.n. of Acclimate.
acclimatize         
v. a.
Same as Acclimate.
acclimate         
(AE) see acclimatize

Wikipedia

Acclimatization

Acclimatization or acclimatisation (also called acclimation or acclimatation) is the process in which an individual organism adjusts to a change in its environment (such as a change in altitude, temperature, humidity, photoperiod, or pH), allowing it to maintain fitness across a range of environmental conditions. Acclimatization occurs in a short period of time (hours to weeks), and within the organism's lifetime (compared to adaptation, which is evolution, taking place over many generations). This may be a discrete occurrence (for example, when mountaineers acclimate to high altitude over hours or days) or may instead represent part of a periodic cycle, such as a mammal shedding heavy winter fur in favor of a lighter summer coat. Organisms can adjust their morphological, behavioral, physical, and/or biochemical traits in response to changes in their environment. While the capacity to acclimate to novel environments has been well documented in thousands of species, researchers still know very little about how and why organisms acclimate the way that they do.

Examples of use of ACCLIMATING
1. He has lived in the U.S. for 26 years and says Brazilians have no difficulty acclimating to life here.
2. Villaraigosa is acclimating Los Angeles to the idea that private purposes need a public sphere, and, more elementally, that a mayor can matter.
3. Charles van Commenee, technical director for the Dutch National Olympic Committee, said the Netherlands, which has decided to base most of its athletes in South Korea, said acclimating to the pollution rather than avoiding it might be the answer.
4. Investment houses that had been doing brisk business and raising funds hand over fist before the crisis struck are now acclimating to the cooler conditions and a lack of cash flow.
5. "He certainly became one of the Democrats‘ spokespersons right off the bat, so he seems to be acclimating well to the Senate and advocating what he believes," Allen said.