A broad area of low pressure extending from western Cuba northward into the Florida straits is interacting with a mid to upper-level trough.

While this system is producing a large area of showers and thunderstorms, there are no signs of an organized surface circulation and upper-level winds are expected to become less favorable for subtropical cyclone formation.

While Sunday this system had a medium chance of forming into a tropical cyclone, the atmospheric conditions have become less favorable for formation.

On Monday, the National Hurricane Center says this system has a low chance, near 0 percent, of becoming a subtropical cyclone during the next 48 hours. Regardless of any additional development, the system will produce widespread rainfall and isolated gusty winds over portions of northern Cuba, the Florida keys and South Florida today as it moves generally northeastward near 15 mph.

Already during the past 24 hours parts of the Florida Keys have received more than two inches of rain. Miami-Dade county and Broward county started seeing the rain early Monday morning and can expect the potential of about 0.75 inches to about 1.25 inches of rain before the rain finally stops late Monday night.