Development and Calibration of Seasonal Probabilistic Forecasts of Ice-Free Dates and Freeze-Up Dates

Author:

Dirkson Arlan1,Denis Bertrand2,Sigmond Michael3,Merryfield William J.3

Affiliation:

1. a Département des sciences de la Terre et de l’atmosphère, Université du Québec à Montréal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada

2. b Environment and Climate Change Canada, Meteorological Services of Canada, Montreal, Quebec, Canada

3. c Environment and Climate Change Canada, Canadian Center for Climate Modeling and Analysis, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada

Abstract

AbstractDynamical forecasting systems are being used to skillfully predict deterministic ice-free and freeze-up date events in the Arctic. This paper extends such forecasts to a probabilistic framework and tests two calibration models to correct systematic biases and improve the statistical reliability of the event dates: trend-adjusted quantile mapping (TAQM) and nonhomogeneous censored Gaussian regression (NCGR). TAQM is a probability distribution mapping method that corrects the forecast for climatological biases, whereas NCGR relates the calibrated parametric forecast distribution to the raw ensemble forecast through a regression model framework. For NCGR, the observed event trend and ensemble-mean event date are used to predict the central tendency of the predictive distribution. For modeling forecast uncertainty, we find that the ensemble-mean event date, which is related to forecast lead time, performs better than the ensemble variance itself. Using a multidecadal hindcast record from the Canadian Seasonal to Interannual Prediction System (CanSIPS), TAQM and NCGR are applied to produce categorical forecasts quantifying the probabilities for early, normal, and late ice retreat and advance. While TAQM performs better than adjusting the raw forecast for mean and linear trend bias, NCGR is shown to outperform TAQM in terms of reliability, skill, and an improved tendency for forecast probabilities to be no worse than climatology. Testing various cross-validation setups, we find that NCGR remains useful when shorter hindcast records (~20 years) are available. By applying NCGR to operational forecasts, stakeholders can be more confident in using seasonal forecasts of sea ice event timing for planning purposes.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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