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El Niño is believed to be caused by the failure of trade winds and, consequently, of the ocean currents normally driven by these winds. Warm surface waters then flow in from the east. The phenomenon can disrupt the climate of the area disastrously, and has played a part in causing famine in Indonesia, drought and bush fires in the Galapagos Islands, rainstorms in California, USA, and in South America, and the destruction of Peru's anchovy harvest and wildlife in 198283. El Niño contributed to algal blooms in Australia's drought-stricken rivers and an unprecedented number of typhoons in Japan in 1991. It is also thought to have caused the 1997 drought in Australia and contributed to certain ecological disasters such as bush fires in Indonesia.
Blue represents the Caribbean Sea. Yellow stands for the golden beaches. Effective date: 10 July 1973.
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