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Peer-reviewed

An intercomparison of approaches for improving operational seasonal streamflow forecasts

Pablo A. Mendoza, Andrew W. Wood, E. Clark, Eric Rothwell, Martyn Clark, Bart Nijssen, L. D. Brekke, J. R. Arnold

Hydrology and earth system sciences · 2017

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Summary

Abstract. For much of the last century, forecasting centers around the world have offered seasonal streamflow predictions to support water management. Recent work suggests that the two major avenues to advance seasonal predictability are improvements in the estimation of initial hydrologic conditions (IHCs) and the incorporation of climate information. This study investigates the marginal benefits of a variety of methods using IHCs and/or climate information, focusing on seasonal water supply forecasts (WSFs) in five case study watersheds located in the US Pacific Northwest region. We specify two benchmark methods that mimic standard operational approaches – statistical regression against IHCs and model-based ensemble streamflow prediction (ESP) – and then systematically intercompare WSFs

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.5194/hess-21-3915-2017
Catalogue ID
BFmoef2us1-tt68wm
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