A Multi-Temporal-Scale Modulation Mechanism for the Postprocessing of Precipitation Ensemble Forecasts: Benefits for Streamflow Forecasting

Author:

Bellier Joseph12ORCID,Whitin Brett3,Scheuerer Michael4,Brown James5,Hamill Thomas M.2

Affiliation:

1. a Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences, University of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, Colorado

2. b NOAA/Physical Sciences Laboratory, Boulder, Colorado

3. c California–Nevada River Forecast Center, National Weather Service, Sacramento, California

4. d Norwegian Computing Center, Oslo, Norway

5. e Hydrologic Solutions Limited, Southampton, United Kingdom

Abstract

Abstract In the postprocessing of ensemble forecasts of weather variables, it is standard practice to first calibrate the forecasts in a univariate setting, before reconstructing multivariate ensembles that have a correct covariability in space, time, and across variables, via so-called “reordering” methods. Within this framework though, postprocessors cannot fully extract the skill of the raw forecast that may exist at larger scales. A multi-temporal-scale modulation mechanism for precipitation is here presented, which aims at improving the forecasts over different accumulation periods, and which can be coupled with any univariate calibration and multivariate reordering techniques. The idea, originally known under the term “canonical events,” has been implemented for more than a decade in the Meteorological Ensemble Forecast Processor (MEFP), a component of the U.S. National Weather Service’s (NWS) Hydrologic Ensemble Forecast Service (HEFS), although users were left with material in the gray literature. This paper proposes a formal description of the mechanism and studies its intrinsic connection with the multivariate reordering process. The verification of modulated and unmodulated forecasts, when coupled with two popular methods for reordering, the Schaake shuffle and ensemble copula coupling (ECC), is performed on 11 Californian basins, on both precipitation and streamflow. Results demonstrate the clear benefit of the multi-temporal-scale modulation, in particular on multiday total streamflow. However, the relative gain depends on the method used for reordering, with more benefits expected when this latter method is not able to reconstruct an adequate temporal structure on the calibrated precipitation forecasts.

Funder

Earth System Research Laboratories

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

Reference29 articles.

1. Multiscale postprocessor for ensemble streamflow prediction for short to long ranges;Alizadeh, B.,2020

2. The quiet revolution of numerical weather prediction;Bauer, P.,2015

3. Using meteorological analogues for reordering postprocessed precipitation ensembles in hydrological forecasting;Bellier, J.,2017

4. Generation of scenarios from calibrated ensemble forecasts with a dual-ensemble copula-coupling approach;Ben Bouallègue, Z.,2016

5. Verification of temperature, precipitation, and streamflow forecasts from the NOAA/NWS Hydrologic Ensemble Forecast Service (HEFS): 1. Experimental design and forcing verification;Brown, J. D.,2014

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