Evaluation of global fine-resolution precipitation products and their uncertainty quantification in ensemble discharge simulations

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Abstract

The applicability of six fine-resolution precipitation products, including precipitation radar, infrared, microwave and gauge-based products, using different precipitation computation recipes, is evaluated using statistical and hydrological methods in northeastern China. In addition, a framework quantifying uncertainty contributions of precipitation products, hydrological models, and their interactions to uncertainties in ensemble discharges is proposed. The investigated precipitation products are Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) products (TRMM3B42 and TRMM3B42RT), Global Land Data Assimilation System (GLDAS)/Noah, Asian Precipitation - Highly-Resolved Observational Data Integration Towards Evaluation of Water Resources (APHRODITE), Precipitation Estimation from Remotely Sensed Information using Artificial Neural Networks (PERSIANN), and a Global Satellite Mapping of Precipitation (GSMAP-MVK+) product. Two hydrological models of different complexities, i.e. a water and energy budget-based distributed hydrological model and a physically based semi-distributed hydrological model, are employed to investigate the influence of hydrological models on simulated discharges. Results show APHRODITE has high accuracy at a monthly scale compared with other products, and GSMAP-MVK+ shows huge advantage and is better than TRMM3B42 in relative bias (RB), Nash-Sutcliffe coefficient of efficiency (NSE), root mean square error (RMSE), correlation coefficient (CC), false alarm ratio, and critical success index. These findings could be very useful for validation, refinement, and future development of satellite-based products (e.g. NASA Global Precipitation Measurement). Although large uncertainty exists in heavy precipitation, hydrological models contribute most of the uncertainty in extreme discharges. Interactions between precipitation products and hydrological models can have the similar magnitude of contribution to discharge uncertainty as the hydrological models. A better precipitation product does not guarantee a better discharge simulation because of interactions. It is also found that a good discharge simulation depends on a good coalition of a hydrological model and a precipitation product, suggesting that, although the satellite-based precipitation products are not as accurate as the gauge-based products, they could have better performance in discharge simulations when appropriately combined with hydrological models. This information is revealed for the first time and very beneficial for precipitation product applications.

Figures

  • Table 1. Precipitation products.
  • Figure 1. Biliu basin: (a) the location of Liaoning province within China; (b) the location of Biliu basin within Liaoning province; (c) the distributions of rain gauges, discharge gauge, automatic weather stations, digital elevation model, and diagrammatic 0.25◦ precipitation cells; and (d) diagrammatic description of downscaling the 0.25◦ precipitation cells to 300 m× 300 m cells, and retrieving the 300 m× 300 m cells located within the basin boundary.
  • Figure 2. Diagrammatic flowchart of the proposed framework for quantification of uncertainty contributions to ensemble discharges simulated using precipitation products on the basis of the analysis of variance (ANOVA) approach.
  • Figure 3. Scatter plots of basin-averaged precipitation products versus gauge observations at a daily scale.
  • Figure 4. Scatter plots of basin-averaged precipitation products versus gauge observations at a monthly scale.
  • Figure 5. Time series plots of basin-averaged precipitation product values versus gauge observations at a monthly scale.
  • Figure 6. Inter-annual basin-averaged monthly precipitation.
  • Figure 7. Probability distributions of the six precipitation products by occurrence (CDFc) and volume (CDFv).

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The Global Land Data Assimilation System

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Qi, W., Zhang, C., Fu, G., Sweetapple, C., & Zhou, H. (2016). Evaluation of global fine-resolution precipitation products and their uncertainty quantification in ensemble discharge simulations. Hydrology and Earth System Sciences, 20(2), 903–920. https://doi.org/10.5194/hess-20-903-2016

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