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Despite their tropical location, the islands are surrounded by
relatively cold waters brought northwards by the Humboldt
Current. The Galapagos has two main seasons, each of which has
an effect on the flora and fauna: the warm and wet season from
January to June and the cool and dry (garúa) season, from July
to December.
During the garúa season, cooler waters from the Humboldt
Current are driven to the Galapagos by the southeast trade
winds, with an average sea temperature of 22°C (71°F). As a
result, there is warm tropical air passing over cool water. The
moisture evaporating from the sea is concentrated in an
inversion layer (300 to 600 m above sea level) and the higher
parts of the islands, which intercept this layer, receive
precipitation in the form of garúa (mist rain). While lowland
areas remain dry though cool.
During the warm season the southeast trade winds diminish in
strength and warmer waters from the Panama Basin flow through
the islands.
The average sea temperature rises to 25° C (77°F).
Warmer waters cause the cool season inversion layer to break up,
and the Galapagos islands experience a more typical tropical
climate with blue skies and occasionally heavy showers. In some
years, the flow of warm water is much greater than normal, and
an "El Niño" year results. Surface water temperatures
are higher and rainfall can increase greatly. Life on land
blossoms but seabirds and sea life, which depend on the more
productive, cooler waters, may experience dramatic breeding
failures.
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