Since
the 1800s, Peruvian fisherman noticed that their harvest completely failed
every few years. This periodic event was
associated with unusually warm
waters off the coast of Peru.
These warm waters
resulted from a shutdown of the upwelling circulation normally found along
the equator. Since upwelling supplies
nutrients to the surface waters,
this resulted in mass starvation of plant and animal life in the eastern
equatorial Pacific. Since the periodic warming
almost always occurred around
December, the fisherman named it El Ni–o, in
reference to the Christ child.