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Koster, R. D., G. K. Walker, S. P. P. Mahanama, and R. H. Reichle:
"Soil Moisture Initialization Error and Subgrid Variability of Precipitation in Seasonal Streamflow Forecasting"
Journal of Hydrometeorology, 15, 69-88, doi:10.1175/JHM-D-13-050.1, 2014.

Abstract:
Offline simulations over the conterminous United States (CONUS) with a land surface model are used to address two issues relevant to the forecasting of large-scale seasonal streamflow: (i) the extent to which errors in soil moisture initialization degrade streamflow forecasts, and (ii) the extent to which a realistic increase in the spatial resolution of forecasted precipitation would improve streamflow forecasts. The addition of error to a soil moisture initialization field is found to lead to a nearly proportional reduction in large-scale seasonal streamflow forecast skill. The linearity of the response allows the determination of a lower bound for the increase in streamflow forecast skill achievable through improved soil moisture estimation, for example, through the assimilation of satellite-based soil moisture measurements. An increase in the resolution of precipitation is found to have an impact on large-scale seasonal streamflow forecasts only when evaporation variance is significant relative to precipitation variance. This condition is met only in the western half of the CONUS domain. Taken together, the two studies demonstrate the utility of a continental-scale land surface-modeling system as a tool for addressing the science of hydrological prediction.


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NASA-GSFC / GMAO / Rolf Reichle