What is a tropical depression?

A tropical depression is the weakest form of a cyclone and is less severe than a tropical storm or a hurricane. The Atlantic basin hurricane season runs from June 1 to November 30.

When a thunderstorm complex develops a low-pressure circulation, the National Hurricane Center identifies the system as a tropical depression - the weakest form of any tropical cyclone but don’t let its lack of strength surprise you.

A tropical depression has maximum sustained winds of 38 mph or less, and unlike tropical storms and hurricanes, tropical depressions are identified with numbers and not names.

Numbers are assigned in sequential order, and the season's first tropical depression is identified as Tropical Depression One or TD 1. This will be followed by Tropical Depression Two, Tropical Depression Three, etc., and the sequential designations will continue until the season ends.

Tropical depressions form in the same regions as tropical storms and hurricanes develop in and are often the beginning stages of significant cyclones.

7 FACTS TO KNOW ABOUT HURRICANES

Hurricane experts say water temperatures of at least 78 – 80 °F are typically needed to produce enough heat energy for these cyclones to develop.

The NHC says most form between 5 and 30 degrees North latitude and work westward until a change in the weather pattern curves the cyclone to the north and northeast.

Despite their usual disorganization, the effects of tropical depressions can be severe and produce heavy rainfall and tornadoes.

If a tropical depression is slow-moving, it can produce deadly flashing and lead to damage amounts similar to a tropical storm or a hurricane.

Once sustained winds reach 39 mph or greater, the NHC upgrades the cyclone to a tropical storm, and the system earns a name from a list of 21 names designated for the season.

HERE’S WHY THE ATLANTIC HURRICANE SEASON RUNS FROM JUNE TO NOVEMBER

In 2001, a weakening Tropical Storm Allison produced most of its damage as a tropical depression over Texas.

The cyclone spent four days over the Lone Star State, dropping nearly 37 inches of rain in Houston and spawning several tornadoes.

Image 1 of 4

HOUSTON, UNITED STATES:  Eighteen wheeler trucks are swamped 10 June 2001 in a motel parking lot off of Interstate 10 in Houston, Texas, following heavy rains from tropical storm Allison. Thousands of people in Texas and Louisiana are temporarily homeless after being forced to flee flooding caused by four days of torrential rains. The American Red Cross blamed at least seven deaths on the violent weather, the aftermath of tropical storm Allison. (JAMES NIELSEN/AFP via Getty Images)

Image 2 of 4

HOUSTON, UNITED STATES:  A large truck lies were swept off Interstate 10 in Houston, Texas, 10 June 2001 following heavys rains and high water from tropical storm Allison. Thousands of people in Texas and Louisiana were temporarily homeless after being forced to flee flooding caused by four days of torrential rains. The American Red Cross blamed at least seven deaths on the violent weather, the aftermath of tropical storm Allison. (JAMES NIELSEN/AFP via Getty Images)

Image 3 of 4

HOUSTON, UNITED STATES:  US Highway 59 is still impassable 10 June 2001 in Houston, Texas, due to rain from tropical storm Allison.  Thousands of people in Texas and Louisiana  were temporarily homeless after being forced to flee flooding caused by four days of torrential rains. The American Red Cross blamed at least seven deaths on the violent weather, the aftermath of tropical storm Allison.   AFP PHOTO/James NIELSEN (Photo credit should read JAMES NIELSEN/AFP via Getty Images) ( )

Image 4 of 4

Track of Allison from 2001 ( )

Damage estimated topped $5 billion, and the system was responsible for 41 deaths along the Gulf Coast.

There is no time limit for how long a cyclone can be categorized as a tropical depression. Some last for only hours, and others can be around for days or even weeks – it all depends on how long its thunderstorms can keep the center of circulation around and winds remain sustained at a sufficient rate.