By Maximilian Heath

BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) -Heavy soil moisture in Argentina’s agricultural fields following an unusually rainy winter is expected to offset the impact of lower rainfall in the coming months due to La Nina, agroclimate specialists said.

By the end of October, Argentina, a key global food exporter, had recorded four consecutive months of above-average rainfall, according to the Rosario Grains Exchange.

The fertile fields are now saturated in some areas, providing a favorable starting point for the warmer half of the year, which will be influenced by La Nina.

“Most models are already indicating the persistence of a La Nina event,” Leonardo De Benedictis, a meteorologist specializing in agriculture, told Reuters. La Nina is a climate pattern marked by unusually cold Pacifi

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