New high-risk tropical threat for US to arise in Gulf of Mexico next week
An area close to Central America, Cuba and Florida is likely to give birth to the next significant tropical threat to the southeastern United States before the end of September, AccuWeather meteorologists warn.
"The region we are closely watching is more commonly a threat to tropical development in the late spring or mid- to late autumn," AccuWeather Lead Hurricane Expert Alex DaSilva stated. "There's even evidence of the Central America gyre now, which is also more common in the spring and later in the autumn."
The gyre is a vast but weak, slow-spinning storm, and it has set up over Central America. A gyre over the warm water of the Caribbean makes it easier for clusters of showers and thunderstorms to form, which can evolve into tropical depressions and storms either on the Atlantic or Pacific sides of Central America.
Typically during the middle to late part of September, tropical storms and hurricanes are generated by tropical waves that originate from Africa. However, in recent weeks, unusual conditions have disrupted the evolution of tropical waves, resulting in fewer named storms.
Not only have the tropics been behaving strangely, but so have weather patterns in general across the U.S. Waves of cool air moved into the Southwest, and an unusually strong jet stream-level storm in the Southeastern states formed in the wake of Francine. The jet stream storm helped create a potent tropical rainstorm that made landfall in North Carolina-a setup more common for mid- to late October.
The weirdness may continue should a potent tropical storm or hurricane spin up next week more from the Central America gyre rather than a tropical wave over the Atlantic Ocean.
"Given how warm waters typically are in the region and energy from the Central America gyre, there is the potential for any system that forms over the western Caribbean to the Gulf of Mexico to intensify and track into the U.S. quickly," DaSilva said.
Because of the concern, AccuWeather's team of experts has raised the development chances to "high."
There will likely be some stiff breezes (wind shear) near the U.S., but systems that move with the shear rather than against it are sometimes less negatively affected by it, DaSilva explained.
While climatology suggests a track into the central or eastern U.S. Gulf coast is most likely at this time with a feature that forms and ramps up quickly with a strong jet stream, a delay in the development of the tropical feature and weaker jet stream could allow a rare late-September track along the Texas coast.
AccuWeather has designated the formation window from Monday, Sept. 23, through Wednesday, Sept. 25. This represents only the period when a tropical depression or storm may form and not the entire life cycle. Any U.S. landfall could occur days after the formation period.
Residents and visitors as well as fishing, shipping and cruise interests from Central America to southeastern Mexico, Cuba, the U.S. Gulf Coast, the southern Atlantic coast and the Bahamas should monitor the situation.
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