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- Latin American nations must be on high alert as the weather phenomenon known as El Nino rapidly switches over to La Nina, experts said on Thursday, leaving populations and crops little time to recover.
"We just saw it happen," said Yolanda Gonzalez, director of the International Research Center for the El Nino Phenomenon."A year ago we came out of a Nina, and in March there were already signs of a Nino." In South America, the weather patterns can hit key crops such as wheat and corn, denting commodity-dependent economies.
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