Tropical Storm Idalia formed Sunday in the Gulf of Mexico amid warnings it could slam across Florida’s shores as a hurricane, dropping up to 18 inches of rain on a region battered less than a year ago by historic Hurricane Ian.

Ryan Truchelut, chief meteorologist at Florida-based WeatherTiger, says there are warning signals that Idalia could reach major hurricane intensity − sustained winds of at least 111 mph for Category 3 status − and that it would be “naïve to ignore them.”

On Sunday night, Truchelut said Idalia was in the northwestern Caribbean and appeared to be developing “deep area” thunderstorm activity near its circulation center, which could cause intensification of the storm on Monday. Idalia had also drifted slightly east at 3 mph with an increased maximum of sustained winds up from 45 mph.

“More damaging and less damaging outcomes remain on the table,” said Truchelut, who provides forecasts for the USA TODAY Network. “But the eastern Panhandle, Big Bend and west-central Florida coasts are at serious risk of surge, wind and rain impacts from a potential major hurricane landfall Wednesday.”

AccuWeather said several inches of rain could trigger inland flooding in low-lying areas beginning as early as Tuesday in central and northern Florida. Wind gusts of up to 60 mph are likely in much of northern and central Florida with gusts of up to 80 mph along the Florida Gulf Coast.

A high risk for impact was centered around the Big Bend region of the Gulf Coast linking the Panhandle and peninsula, AccuWeather said, warning of “life-threatening damaging winds, torrential rain and storm surge flooding” as Idalia closes in on the state, gaining strength as it sweeps across high water temperatures in the Gulf.

The storm could prompt travel problems, and “significant airline delays” are possible for flights in and out of the region Tuesday to Wednesday, AccuWeather said.

Developments:

◾Late Sunday, the storm was about 95 miles east-southeast of Cozumel, Mexico, moving northeast at 3 mph with highest sustained winds of 45 mph, forecasters said. Hurricanes have winds of 74 mph and above.

◾Idalia could approach Florida on Wednesday with winds of up to 100 mph, according to the latest forecasts from the Hurricane Center. That would make it a Category 2 hurricane.