Gridded Ensemble Precipitation and Temperature Estimates for the Contiguous United States

Author:

Newman Andrew J.1,Clark Martyn P.1,Craig Jason1,Nijssen Bart2,Wood Andrew1,Gutmann Ethan1,Mizukami Naoki1,Brekke Levi3,Arnold Jeff R.4

Affiliation:

1. National Center for Atmospheric Research,* Boulder, Colorado

2. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington

3. Bureau of Reclamation, U.S. Department of Interior, Denver, Colorado

4. Institute for Water Resources, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Seattle, Washington

Abstract

Abstract Gridded precipitation and temperature products are inherently uncertain because of myriad factors, including interpolation from a sparse observation network, measurement representativeness, and measurement errors. Generally uncertainty is not explicitly accounted for in gridded products of precipitation or temperature; if it is represented, it is often included in an ad hoc manner. A lack of quantitative uncertainty estimates for hydrometeorological forcing fields limits the application of advanced data assimilation systems and other tools in land surface and hydrologic modeling. This study develops a gridded, observation-based ensemble of precipitation and temperature at a daily increment for the period 1980–2012 for the conterminous United States, northern Mexico, and southern Canada. This allows for the estimation of precipitation and temperature uncertainty in hydrologic modeling and data assimilation through the use of the ensemble variance. Statistical verification of the ensemble indicates that it has generally good reliability and discrimination of events of various magnitudes but has a slight wet bias for high threshold events (>50 mm). The ensemble mean is similar to other widely used hydrometeorological datasets but with some important differences. The ensemble product produces a more realistic occurrence of precipitation statistics (wet day fraction), which impacts the empirical derivation of other fields used in land surface and hydrologic modeling. In terms of applications, skill in simulations of streamflow in 671 headwater basins is similar to other coarse-resolution datasets. This is the first version, and future work will address temporal correlation of precipitation anomalies, inclusion of other data streams, and examination of topographic lapse rate choices.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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