The colossal amount of snow in California’s mountains from a winter of ferocious storms has started to melt, and an incoming heat wave is reigniting flooding concerns across the state.

“The ‘Big Melt’ is now officially arriving,” University of California, Los Angeles scientist Daniel Swain warned on Twitter a few days ago. “Flows on many rivers draining the central and southern Sierra will double or triple (with locally greater increases) as temperatures rise. Some rivers will exceed flood stage, and Tulare Basin flooding will worsen.”

A huge snowpack from record-smashing snowfalls may be a blessing for a region that had long been plagued by drought. But experts have warned it’s also a potential disaster if it melts all at once. 

The state’s vast wilderness, including Yosemite, and some critical agricultural communities are at particular risk for flooding. Forecasters are less concerned about the state’s massive coastal cities.

VIDEO:Parade of storms replenish California reservoirs

PHOTOS:Before and after photos show California reservoirs replenished after historic rains

The lingering effects from winter storms are already causing rising river and stream flow levels not seen in years, the California Department of Water Resources reported.

Hot weather is in the forecast for California

“We’re going to see things warm up, and with that warmth will come more snowmelt,” said Michael Anderson, the California state climatologist, at a media briefing earlier this week.