SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Hurricane watches were issued for parts of Cuba and Mexico on Monday as a cluster of storms south of the Cayman Islands was expected to strengthen into a major hurricane while moving north toward the U.S., forecasters said.
The disturbance is forecast to become Hurricane Helene on Wednesday as it approaches the Gulf Coast, according to the U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami.
''It could certainly become a major hurricane, which is Category 3,'' Brad Reinhart, a senior hurricane specialist at the center, said in a phone interview. ''People in the Florida Panhandle and the west coast of Florida certainly need to pay close attention.''
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis declared a state of emergency in 41 counties ahead of the expected hurricane.
Reinhart said it's too early to forecast where it might make landfall. He warned ''there's always some potential'' for it to strengthen into a Category 4 storm, but said it might not be the most likely outcome.
He said the disturbance could become a tropical storm by Tuesday, and that tropical storm conditions could affect parts of Florida on Wednesday as it approaches. It could turn into a major hurricane by the time it reaches the northeast Gulf Coast on Thursday.
''It's a pretty aggressive forecast for intensification over the next few days,'' he said. ''People need to remain on high alert.''
Very warm sea temperatures are forecast to fuel formation of a tropical storm, which is forecast to quickly strengthen into a hurricane thanks to favorable conditions that include a moist atmosphere, which supports thunderstorm developments, and light upper-level winds at more than 10,000 feet (around 3,000 meters), Reinhart said.