Editor's note: This story will be updated regularly throughout the day as conditions change.

Tropical Storm Leslie remains a large cyclone.

Location: 450 miles east-northeast of Bermuda

Maximum sustained winds: 65 mph

Movement: north at 12 mph

Next advisory: 5 a.m.

Interactive map: Where is Leslie going next?

At 11 p.m., the center of Tropical Storm Leslie was 450 miles east-northeast of Bermuda.

Interactive map:Spaghetti models for Hurricane Leslie

Swells from Leslie continue to impact the Treasure Coast, and a beach hazards statement was issued by the National Weather Service through Thursday evening.

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Expect hazardous surf conditions again today, with rough surf and dangerous rip currents.

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Leslie is moving toward the north near 12 mph, and this motion is expected to continue through Friday with a decrease in forward speed.

Leslie should turn eastward or east-southeastward over the weekend.

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Maximum sustained winds have decreased to near 65 mph, with higher gusts.

Little change in strength is forecast during the next two to three days.

Tropical-storm-force winds extend outward up to 290 miles from the center.

Hazards affecting land from Hurricane Leslie

Surf: Large swells generated by Leslie will continue to affect portions of the southeast coast of the United States, Bermuda and the Bahamas during the next few days.

Swells are expected to increase near the coasts of New England and Atlantic Canada by the end of the week.

Brisk onshore flow and swells from Hurricane Leslie will lead to hazardous surf conditions on the Treasure Coast again today.

A beach hazards statement is in effect through Thursday evening for rough surf and rip currents.

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Rough surf conditions will be present all day due to onshore winds, while the threat of rip currents will be greatest through late this morning due to tidal effects along all east Central Florida beaches.

Area of low pressure in Caribbean should be watched

Surface observations and satellite data indicate that an area of low pressure is located near Cabo Gracias a Dios on the eastern border of Honduras and Nicaragua. This system is accompanied by an extensive area of disturbed weather extending from Central America eastward through Hispaniola.

Upper-level winds are not currently favorable for tropical cyclone formation, but environmental conditions are forecast to become less hostile, and a tropical depression could form by late this weekend or early next week in the northwestern Caribbean Sea or the southern Gulf of Mexico as the system moves slowly northwestward.

Regardless of tropical cyclone formation, this disturbance will continue to bring torrential rains primarily to portions of Central America and the Yucatan peninsula during the next few days.