Ana formed early Saturday morning about 200 miles east-northeast off the coast of Bermuda. As of Sunday morning, Ana had intensified into a tropical storm with maximum winds of 45 mph.
By 11 a.m. Sunday, Ana was barely holding on as a tropical cyclone. The tropical storm was about 425 miles northeast of Bermuda and moving northeast near 14 mph with 40 maximum sustained winds.
With the latest update the National Hurricane Center has downgraded Ana to a Tropical Depression. Ana is now over cold waters and surrounded by dry air which will weaken the storm significantly.
Ana will never come anywhere near the United States.
INTERACTIVE MAP: Tracking the Tropics | SUPPLY CHECKLIST: Build-A-Kit That Fits
This is the seventh straight year a least one named storm has developed in the Atlantic basin prior to the June 1 official start of hurricane season. A subtropical storm is a non-frontal cyclone with both tropical and extratropical cyclones.
Ad
Copyright 2021 by WJXT News4Jax – All rights reserved.