By default, source and replica servers assume that they are in
        the same time zone. If you are replicating between servers in
        different time zones, the time zone must be set on both source
        and replica. Otherwise, statements depending on the local time
        on the source are not replicated properly, such as statements
        that use the NOW() or
        FROM_UNIXTIME() functions.
      
        Verify that your combination of settings for the system time
        zone (system_time_zone), server
        current time zone (the global value of
        time_zone), and per-session
        time zones (the session value of
        time_zone) on the source and
        replica is producing the correct results. In particular, if the
        time_zone system variable is
        set to the value SYSTEM, indicating that the
        server time zone is the same as the system time zone, this can
        cause the source and replica to apply different time zones. For
        example, a source could write the following statement in the
        binary log:
      
SET @@session.time_zone='SYSTEM';
        If this source and its replica have a different setting for
        their system time zones, this statement can produce unexpected
        results on the replica, even if the replica's global
        time_zone value has been set to
        match the source's. For an explanation of MySQL Server's time
        zone settings, and how to change them, see
        Section 5.1.13, “MySQL Server Time Zone Support”.
      
See also Section 16.4.1.15, “Replication and System Functions”.