JOURNAL ARTICLE

Transferability of climate simulation uncertainty to hydrological impacts

Huimin WangJie ChenAlex J. CannonChong‐Yu XuHua Chen

Year: 2018 Journal:   Hydrology and earth system sciences Vol: 22 (7)Pages: 3739-3759   Publisher: Copernicus Publications

Abstract

Abstract. Considering rapid increases in the number of climate model simulations being produced by modelling centres, it is often infeasible to use all of them in climate change impact studies. In order to thoughtfully select subsets of climate simulations from a large ensemble, several envelope-based methods have been proposed. The subsets are expected to cover a similar uncertainty envelope to the full ensemble in terms of climate variables. However, it is not a given that the uncertainty in hydrological impacts will be similarly well represented. Therefore, this study investigates the transferability of climate uncertainty related to the choice of climate simulations to hydrological impacts. Two envelope-based selection methods, K means clustering and the Katsavounidis–Kuo–Zhang (KKZ) method, are used to select subsets from an ensemble of 50 climate simulations over two watersheds with very different climates using 31 precipitation and temperature variables. Transferability is evaluated by comparing uncertainty coverage between climate variables and 17 hydrological variables simulated by a hydrological model. The importance of choosing climate variables properly when selecting subsets is investigated by including and excluding temperature variables. Results show that KKZ performs better than K means at selecting subsets of climate simulations for hydrological impacts, and the uncertainty coverage of climate variables is similar to that of hydrological variables. The subset of the first 10 simulations covers over 85 % of total uncertainty. As expected, temperature variables are important for the snow-related watershed, but less important for the rainfall-driven watershed. Overall, envelope-based selection of around 10 climate simulations, based on climate variables that characterize the physical processes controlling the hydrology of the watershed, is recommended for hydrological impact studies.

Keywords:
Environmental science Climate change Watershed Climate model Precipitation Uncertainty analysis Climatology Computer science Meteorology Mathematics Statistics Geography Ecology

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30
Cited By
3.01
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
61
Refs
0.89
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
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Citation History

Topics

Hydrology and Watershed Management Studies
Physical Sciences →  Environmental Science →  Water Science and Technology
Climate variability and models
Physical Sciences →  Environmental Science →  Global and Planetary Change
Hydrological Forecasting Using AI
Physical Sciences →  Environmental Science →  Environmental Engineering
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