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NEW: Tropical Storm Colin is about 315 miles southwest of Tampa
Flooding is possible, forecasters warn
The heavy rains could help replenish Florida aquifers
Just days after the official start of hurricane season, a tropical storm is churning toward the Florida coast.
Officials warned that the cyclone – which was about 315 miles (505 kilometers) southwest of Tampa, Florida, early Monday – could cause heavy rains, coastal flooding and dangerous surf.
Colin is the third tropical storm to form this year in the Atlantic. It’s the earliest that three named storms have hit the region, besting the previous record – which was set in 1887 – by about a week.
The storm has maximum sustained winds of 50 mph and is heading north-northeast at about 14 mph, forecasters said.
It’s expected to pick up speed and could make landfall Monday, the hurricane center said.
The rainfall could be welcome news for some as the storm replenishes aquifers in the state that have been low on water, CNN meteorologists said.
Flooding is also possible.
Heavy rainfall could cause flash flooding, Myers said, as the storm moves across Florida, southern Georgia and South Carolina.
Tropical storm warnings are in effect from the Altamaha Sound in Georgia to the Sebastian Inlet in Florida and from Indian Pass, Florida, to Englewood, Florida
Earliest third storm on record
Hurricane season officially began June 1. But tropical systems can form during any month of the year.
This year, two named storms formed before the season’s official start.
Alex became a named storm on January 13, the first Atlantic hurricane to form in the month of January since 1938.
Bonnie drenched South Carolina’s coast last month.
Does it mean anything to see storms forming so early?
Not necessarily, forecasters say.
“These first three storms have been very weak systems, even though Bonnie produced a lot of rain in South Carolina,” CNN meteorologist Tom Sater said. “This really means very little when it comes down to how this year may turn out.”
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CNN’s Joshua Berlinger, Vivian Kuo and Jenn Varian contributed to this report.