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Unusual rainfall brings winter flowers to Chile's Atacama desert

Unusual winter weather conditions in Chile's Atacama desert have led to the blooming of the 'pata de guanaco,' a purple flower that barely requires water and prefers sandy sites
Unusual winter weather conditions in Chile's Atacama desert have led to the blooming of the 'pata de guanaco,' a purple flower that barely requires water and prefers sandy sites.

Large swaths of the Atacama desert, the driest on the planet, have been covered with purple and white flowers after unusual rainfall patterns in northern Chile.

Normally, such a desert bloom occurs every few years in the southern springtime—if and when conditions are just right—blanketing thousands of square kilometers.

But the are making an appearance now in winter, something that hasn't happened since 2015, experts say.

Cesar Pizarro, head of biodiversity conservation at the National Forestry Corporation, told AFP that 11-12 millimeters (nearly half an inch) of rainfall in April "plus low cloud cover that has been very intense in the area and that wets these surfaces every night, helped activate these plants."

  • The last time Atacama desert flowers bloomed in the southern winter was in 2015, experts say
    The last time Atacama desert flowers bloomed in the southern winter was in 2015, experts say.
  • A bit of rainfall and low cloud cover helped activate the flowers
    A bit of rainfall and low cloud cover helped activate the flowers.

While the famed spring flowering spreads over 15,000 square kilometers (5,800 square miles), this winter efflorescence is covering only a few hundred square kilometers.

When the bloom is at its peak, more than 200 plant species blossom. Recent weather conditions appear to have mainly suited the "pata de guanaco," a purple flower that barely requires water and prefers sandy sites.

Scientists have not yet determined whether this phenomenon, also recorded in the winter of 2015, "is directly related to change or not, or to the El Niño or La Niña phenomena," said Pizarro.

© 2024 AFP

Citation: Unusual rainfall brings winter flowers to Chile's Atacama desert (2024, July 11) retrieved 30 August 2025 from /news/2024-07-unusual-rainfall-winter-chile-atacama.html
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