I didn't say anything about truth values (semantics) for paraconsistent logics.
I am not expert, but, if I am not mistaken, the main point about a paraconsistent system is that it does not have EFQ. There is nothing stopping us from having premises that are a contradiction, and using a paraconsistent system to derive those premises trivially by the rule of placing a premise on a line. And those premises might be contentual axioms. So we would have theorems in contradiction with one another. And if the system has the rule of adjunction, then we can have the conjunction of the two contradicting premises. The important point though is that we can't use EFQ. But, of course, there are widely different kinds of paraconsistent systems, so I don't intend a complete generalization.
That's syntax (proof system). As to semantics, if I am not mistaken, not all paraconsistent systems accommodate dialetheism, but some do. Indeed the SEP article states that every dialetheistic approach must have a paraconsistent syntax . So, since the set of dialetheistic semantics is not empty, there must be paraconsistent systems (syntax) that accommodate dialetheism (semantics),
In a chart:
Exist. Paraconsistent syntax with dialetheistic semantics.
Exist. Paraconsistent syntax with non-dialetheistic semantics.
Exist. Dialetheism (which is semantics) with paraconsistent syntax.
Not Exist. Dialetheism (which is semantics) with non-paraconsistent syntax.
Paraconsistent logic does not allow contradictions; it does not allow (A & ~A) to be true. — Banno
If I'm not mistaken, that is incorrect as a generalization over all paraconsistent systems, as I mentioned above. As a rough generalization, paraconsistency does not "frown" on deriving a contradiction, and some paraconsistent approaches do not frown on having true contradictions. Rather, all paraconsistent systems don't have EFQ. (By saying that they don't have EFQ, I mean that they don't have "For all sentences P and Q, {P ~P} |- Q)".