A large brush fire has grown to 600 acres in west Miami-Dade County since it started on Monday afternoon, according to the Florida Forest Service.The Quarry 2 Wildfire has currently burned 600 acres and is 30% contained, according to a map of active wildfires provided by the Florida Forest Service, which was updated at 12:40 a.m. on June 16. A fire at NW 137th Ave. and NW 25th St. is still listed on Miami-Dade Fire Rescue's Active Calls page as of 8:53 on June 16.Crews with Miami-Dade Fire Rescue and the Florida Forest Service responded to a First Alarm grass fire near NW 137 Ave. and NW 41 St. at 2:56 p.m. on June 15, according to MDFR. They encountered "large columns of smoke in the area," and as suppression efforts continue and "wind conditions shift," residents of nearby communities could see or smell smoke. No injuries have been reported.Large Miami-area wildfire causing far-reaching smokeA large brush fire has grown to 600 acres in west Miami-Dade County since it started on Monday afternoon, according to the Florida Forest Service.Air quality alert issued for Broward CountyAn air quality alert has been issued for Broward County due to "near surface smoke" from the Quarry 2 Fire, according to the National Weather Service. The alert will last through 12 p.m. on June 16.Exposure to air pollutants including "particulate matter and ground-level ozone" can cause headaches, difficulty breathing, chest pain, asthma attacks, fatigue, increased coughing and irritation of the eyes, throat and sinuses.The NWS recommends monitoring local air quality and reducing outdoor activities if you are "unusually sensitive to particle pollution."Traffic disturbances in the areaAccording to a social media post by the Doral Police Department, "a large brush fire" was impacting local traffic conditions on Monday — power outages caused traffic signals to stop functioning at NW 107 Ave. and NW 41 St., as well as at NW 102 Ave. and NW 41 St.Officers were "on-site directing traffic," and the department advised drivers to navigate carefully, prepare for delays and take alternate routes if any were available.Sarah Perkel is a South Florida Connect Reporter for the USA TODAY Network's Florida Connect team. You can get all of Florida’s best content directly in your inbox each weekday day by signing up for the free newsletter, Florida TODAY.