Weather

Tropical Disturbance South of Florida Has Potential to Develop: Forecasters

The National Hurricane Center has given a disturbance in the Caribbean Sea a strong chance of developing over the next few days.

SARASOTA, FL — A broad area of low pressure currently located in the southwestern Caribbean Sea has been given a strong chance of developing into the 2016 Atlantic Hurricane Season’s next tropical depression.

According to the National Hurricane Center, the area of thunderstorms and cloudiness “is gradually forming across the region.” It has been given a 10 percent chance of forming into a tropical depression over the next 48 hours. Those chances rise to 70 percent over the next five days.

“Environmental conditions are conducive for slow development of this disturbance during the next several days, and a tropical depression is likely to form by late this week or over the weekend while the low drifts northward or northeastward," the center wrote in its 7 p.m. Nov. 14 update.

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It is too early to tell what, if any, impact the system will have on Florida. The storm, if it strengthens enough to earn a name, will be called Otto. Its arrival comes at the tail end of the traditional hurricane season, which runs from June 1 through Nov. 30 each year. The season peaks between mid-August and mid-October. Hurricane Matthew, which wreaked havoc on Florida’s east coast in early October, formed during the traditional peak.

Late-season hurricanes are rare but not unheard of. Hurricane Ida in 2009 initially formed on Nov. 4 and peaked as a Category 2 storm, according to The Weather Channel. Lenny, which formed in 1999, is considered the strongest late-season storm to form in the Atlantic. That Category 4 monster was especially unusual because it took a west to east path through the Caribbean Sea. The storm crashed into the Lesser Antilles on Nov. 17, 1999 while packing maximum sustained winds of 155 mph.

Find out what's happening in Sarasotafor free with the latest updates from Patch.

To find out more about hurricane season and storm preparation, read these related Patch stories:

To keep up with storm activity as the season develops, bookmark the National Hurricane Center’s website, and keep an eye on your hometown Patch site for local information.

Map courtesy of the National Hurricane Center

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