Paraguay
Climate
Paraguay experiences a
subtropical climate in the Paraneña region and a tropical
climate in the Chaco. The Paraneña region is humid, with
abundant precipitation throughout the year and only moderate
seasonal changes in temperature. During the Southern
Hemisphere's summer, which corresponds to the northern
winter, the dominant influence on the climate is the warm
sirocco winds blowing out of the northeast. During the
winter, the dominant wind is the cold pampero from the South
Atlantic, which blows across Argentina and is deflected
northeastward by the Andes in the southern part of that
country. Because of the lack of topographic barriers within
Paraguay, these opposite prevailing winds bring about abrupt
and irregular changes in the usually moderate weather. Winds
are generally brisk. Velocities of 160 kilometers per hour
have been reported in southern locations, and the town of
Encarnación was once leveled by a tornado.
The Paraneña region has
only two distinct seasons: summer from October to March and
winter from May to August. April and September are
transitional months in which temperatures are below the
midsummer averages and minimums may dip below freezing.
Climatically, autumn and spring do not really exist. During
the mild winters, July is the coldest month, with a mean
temperature of about 18°C in Asunción and 17°C on the
Paraná Plateau. There is no significant north-south
variation. The number of days with temperatures falling
below freezing ranges from as few as three to as many as
sixteen yearly, and with even wider variations deep in the
interior. Some winters are very mild, with winds blowing
constantly from the north, and little frost. During a cold
winter, however, tongues of Antarctic air bring subfreezing
temperatures to all areas. No part of the Paraneña region
is entirely free from the possibility of frost and
consequent damage to crops, and snow flurries have been
reported in various locations.
Moist tropical air keeps
the weather warm in the Paraneña region from October
through March. In Asunción the seasonal average is about 24°C,
with January--the warmest month--averaging 29°C. Villarrica
has a seasonal mean temperature of 21°C and a January mean
of 27°C. During the summer, daytime temperatures reaching
38°C are fairly common. Frequent waves of cool air from the
south, however, cause weather that alternates between clear,
humid conditions and storms. Skies will be almost cloudless
for a week to ten days as temperature and humidity rise
continually. As the soggy heat nears intolerable limits,
thunderstorms preceding a cold front will blow in from the
south, and temperatures will drop as much as 15°C in a few
minutes.
Rainfall in the Paraneña
region is fairly evenly distributed. Although local
meteorological conditions play a contributing role, rain
usually falls when tropical air masses are dominant. The
least rain falls in August, when averages in various parts
of the region range from two to ten centimeters. The two
periods of maximum precipitation are March through May and
October to November.
For the region as a
whole, the difference between the driest and the wettest
months ranges from ten to eighteen centimeters. The annual
average rainfall is 127 centimeters, although the average on
the Paraná Plateau is 25 to 38 centimeters greater. All
subregions may experience considerable variations from year
to year. Asunción has recorded as much as 208 centimeters
and as little as 56 centimeters of annual rainfall; Puerto
Bertoni on the Paraná Plateau has recorded as much as 330
centimeters and as little as 79 centimeters.
In contrast to the Paraneña
region, the Chaco has a tropical wet-and-dry climate
bordering on semi-arid. The Chaco experiences seasons that
alternately flood and parch the land, yet seasonal
variations in temperature are modest. Chaco temperatures are
usually high, the averages dropping only slightly in winter.
Even at night the air is stifling despite the usually
present breezes. Rainfall is light, varying from 50 to 100
centimeters per year, except in the higher land to the
northwest where it is somewhat greater. Rainfall is
concentrated in the summer months, and extensive areas that
are deserts in winter become summer swamps. Rainwater
evaporates very rapidly.
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