Floridians advised to plan as chance of storm in Gulf increases

The system near Central America remains disorganized, but could develop into a storm late this week in the Gulf of Mexico.

A graphic released Sunday morning by the National Hurricane Center shows an area, marked in red, where a storm could develop in the Gulf of Mexico later this week. The area of low pressure had a 70% chance of developing into a tropical storm or hurricane, but forecasters say it's too early to tell where it will go or how strong it will be. The area in orange in the eastern Atlantic is where forecasters say a tropical wave could develop over the coming week and move west. The Hurricane Center gave that system a 40% chance of forming over the next seven days.
A graphic released Sunday morning by the National Hurricane Center shows an area, marked in red, where a storm could develop in the Gulf of Mexico later this week. The area of low pressure had a 70% chance of developing into a tropical storm or hurricane, but forecasters say it’s too early to tell where it will go or how strong it will be. The area in orange in the eastern Atlantic is where forecasters say a tropical wave could develop over the coming week and move west. The Hurricane Center gave that system a 40% chance of forming over the next seven days. [ National Hurricane Center ]

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Published 3 hours ago|Updated 2 hours ago

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Weather forecasters continue to eye a broad area of low pressure near Central America that could develop into a tropical storm or a hurricane and affect Florida late this week.

But exactly where the storm goes and how strong it will be remains unclear as rains and thunderstorms related to the system were disorganized Sunday morning.

“There is still a lot of uncertainty,” said Rodney Wynn, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service Tampa Bay. “There is going to be shifts in this storm when it does form up. We’re telling everybody from the west coast (of Florida) to the northern gulf coast to plan for this. It could impact a very large area.”

The National Hurricane Center reported early Sunday that the system, which sat near Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula, had a 70% chance of development in the next seven days, an increase of 10% since Saturday. It is likely to form into a tropical depression in the next few days as it moves north into the Gulf of Mexico.

Once a storm develops, forecasters will have a better idea of where it will go. Most current models show possible storm tracks toward the Florida panhandle and the state’s Big Bend area, while some show tracks closer to Tampa Bay.

Any storm system could impact the Tampa Bay area regardless of where it tracks. Rain chances will increase midweek, Wynn said. A storm would bring deteriorating marine conditions, possible water spouts and tornadoes, gusty winds and threat of storm surge.

In advance of a potential storm, people should prepare hurricane kits with essential supplies, develop an emergency plan for their families, determine if they live in a flood zone and pay attention to the latest weather forecasts, Wynn said.

Ahead of the possible storm, Tampa Bay area weather is expected to be warm and sunny. Dry air will keep rain chances low in the next several days, before precipitation increases again late this week.

Forecasters are also eying another swath of the map in the eastern Atlantic, where they say a tropical wave could develop over the coming week and move west. The Hurricane Center gave that system a 40% chance of forming over the next 7 days.

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