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    A Practical Approach to Developing Climate Change Scenarios for Water Quality Models

    Source: Journal of Hydrometeorology:;2019:;volume 020:;issue 006::page 1197
    Author:
    Gelda, Rakesh K.
    ,
    Mukundan, Rajith
    ,
    Owens, Emmet M.
    ,
    Abatzoglou, John T.
    DOI: 10.1175/JHM-D-18-0213.1
    Publisher: American Meteorological Society
    Abstract: AbstractClimate model output is often downscaled to grids of moderately high spatial resolution (~4?6-km grid cells). Such projections have been used in numerous hydrological impact assessment studies at watershed scales. However, relatively few studies have been conducted to assess the impact of climate change on the hydrodynamics and water quality in lakes and reservoirs. A potential barrier to such assessments is the need for meteorological variables at subdaily time scales that are downscaled to in situ observations to which lake and reservoir water quality models have been calibrated and validated. In this study, we describe a generalizable procedure that utilizes gridded downscaled data; applies a secondary bias-correction procedure using equidistance quantile mapping to map projections to station-based observations; and implements temporal disaggregation models to generate point-scale hourly air and dewpoint temperature, wind speed, and solar radiation for use in water quality models. The proposed approach is demonstrated for six locations within New York State: four within watersheds of the New York City water supply system and two at nearby National Weather Service stations. Disaggregation models developed using observations reproduced hourly data well at all locations, with Nash?Sutcliffe efficiency greater than 0.9 for air temperature and dewpoint, 0.4?0.6 for wind speed, and 0.7?0.9 for solar radiation.
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      A Practical Approach to Developing Climate Change Scenarios for Water Quality Models

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    http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4263762
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    • Journal of Hydrometeorology

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    contributor authorGelda, Rakesh K.
    contributor authorMukundan, Rajith
    contributor authorOwens, Emmet M.
    contributor authorAbatzoglou, John T.
    date accessioned2019-10-05T06:53:43Z
    date available2019-10-05T06:53:43Z
    date copyright2/27/2019 12:00:00 AM
    date issued2019
    identifier otherJHM-D-18-0213.1.pdf
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4263762
    description abstractAbstractClimate model output is often downscaled to grids of moderately high spatial resolution (~4?6-km grid cells). Such projections have been used in numerous hydrological impact assessment studies at watershed scales. However, relatively few studies have been conducted to assess the impact of climate change on the hydrodynamics and water quality in lakes and reservoirs. A potential barrier to such assessments is the need for meteorological variables at subdaily time scales that are downscaled to in situ observations to which lake and reservoir water quality models have been calibrated and validated. In this study, we describe a generalizable procedure that utilizes gridded downscaled data; applies a secondary bias-correction procedure using equidistance quantile mapping to map projections to station-based observations; and implements temporal disaggregation models to generate point-scale hourly air and dewpoint temperature, wind speed, and solar radiation for use in water quality models. The proposed approach is demonstrated for six locations within New York State: four within watersheds of the New York City water supply system and two at nearby National Weather Service stations. Disaggregation models developed using observations reproduced hourly data well at all locations, with Nash?Sutcliffe efficiency greater than 0.9 for air temperature and dewpoint, 0.4?0.6 for wind speed, and 0.7?0.9 for solar radiation.
    publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
    titleA Practical Approach to Developing Climate Change Scenarios for Water Quality Models
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume20
    journal issue6
    journal titleJournal of Hydrometeorology
    identifier doi10.1175/JHM-D-18-0213.1
    journal fristpage1197
    journal lastpage1211
    treeJournal of Hydrometeorology:;2019:;volume 020:;issue 006
    contenttypeFulltext
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