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Drought Monitoring: progress and challenges Kingtse Mo and

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Title: Drought Monitoring: progress and challenges Kingtse Mo and


1
Drought Monitoring progress and challenges
  • Kingtse Mo and Partners
  • Climate Prediction Center
  • NCEP/NWS/NOAA

2
Outline
  • Every month, CPC issues monthly and seasonal
    drought outlook and participates in the Drought
    Monitor operation over the United States
  • To support operational functions, we monitor
    hydroclimate conditions and give drought briefing
    each month to review the current drought
    conditions and drought forecasts
  • Satellite data were used to improve Precip and
    NLDAS
  • Challenges to cover the global drought

3
Current Partners
  • CPC Kingtse Mo, LiChuan Chen, Muthuvel Chelliah,
    Wesley Ebisuzaki
  • EMC NLDAS Team Youlong Xia, Jesse Meng, Helin
    Wei, Michael Ek
  • NASA/GSFC Randy Koster, Greg Walker
  • Princeton Univ. Eric Wood, Justin Scheffield
  • Univ. of Washington Dennis Lettenmaier, S.
    Shukla, Francisco Munoz-Arriola
  • Web Masters Joe Harrison
  • RFCs James noel, Kevin Werner, Andy Wood, SERFC
  • Project Funded by NOAA CPPA, TRACS NASA

4
Drought Indices
  • More than one index to monitor drought
  • Meteorological drought Precipitation deficit.
    (SPI index)
  • Hydrological drought Streamflow or runoff
    deficit (SRI index)
  • Agricultural drought Total soil water storage
    deficit or soil moisture at the root zone deficit
  • (Total soil moisture percentile)
  • Runoff and soil moisture Limited data
    available so we need GLDAS

5
SPI
  • SPI3 shows short term drought dryness over the
    Great Plains, Southeast
  • Wetness over the Midwest
  • For longer term SPIs
  • Dryness persisted for 6-months or longer
  • Typical ENSO signal with dryness over the
    Southern States and Wetness over the North

Warning from the NWS Midwest has been wet for
more than 6 months and possible for Spring floods
D3 D2 D1
6
SPI and other indices
  • SPI Advantages
  • Easy to use and only need station data
  • Cover all time scales
  • Do not need a hydrological model. (Other indices
    are model derived products)
  • Can cover global (NCDC uses station data and CPC
    uses gridded data)
  • SPI Disadvantages
  • Not contain snow information
  • Areas where soil moisture feedback is important
    or large E, SPI may not be representative (e. g.
    Amazon)

7
All three indices do pick up the major drought
events
SRI3
SM percentiles

Dry Southern states Wet Midwest and Northeast
and the west coast

Drought Indices should be able to pick up major
drought events
8
Uncertainties in the NLDAS impact on regional
applications
U Washington
Ensemble SM

EMC
  • The patterns are similar, but there are
    differences
  • Over Southeast, the UW does not show anomalies,
    but the EMC does
  • Over AZNM, drought depicted by the UW is stronger

9
The EMC NCEP system
  • Four models Noah, VIC, Mosaic and SAC
  • Climatology 1979-2007
  • On 0.125 degrees grid
  • P forcing From the CPC P analysis based on rain
    gauges with the PRISM correction.
  • Other atmospheric forcing From the NARR

The University of Washington system
  • Four models Noah, VIC, SAC and CLM
  • Climatology 1915-2007
  • On 0.5 degrees grid
  • P, Tsurf and low level winds from NOAA/NCDC
    co-op stations
  • P from index stations

10
Sensitivity to Precip data
  • The RMS difference (Fig.d) between the ncep and
    the UW ensemble SM are large over the western
    U. S. (gt 20).
  • Largest differences occur after 2001 as
    indicated by the mean differences for two periods
    (Fig. f and g)

11
Number of station reports averaged over a year
12
CPC Gauge-Satellite Merged Precip Analysis
Xie et al (2011)
  • Gauge-based analysis
  • OI of reports at 30K stations
  • CONUS 0.125olat/lon from 1948
  • Global 0.5olat/lon from 1979
  • Poor quality over gauge sparse regions
  • CMORPH Satellite Estimates
  • Integration of all available satellite IR and
    microwave observations
  • 8kmx8km over global land (60oS-60oN)
  • 30-min time resolution from Jan. 98
  • Bias and random error
  • Gauge-satellite merged analysis (available around
    summer)
  • Bias-corrected CMORPH through PDF matching
    against gauge data
  • Same time / space resolution / coverage as CMORPH
  • Gauge-CMORPH combined analysis
  • Daily analysis / 0.25olat/lon

13
To develop global DEWS, we need the following
  • Better P insitu data and better real time
  • reporting
  • 2 Satellite derived P or radar data but need
    better QC and better calibration. (e. g.
    CMORPH/RMORPH)
  • 3.Downward radiation,
  • 4.soil moisture data for verification
  • 5. Better snow information
  • Satellite derived E and SM can help

14
What do we need from GLDAS?
  • Better winter time snow properties SWE and snow
    melt

15
Short wave radiation used for the NLDAS forcing
was corrected Better DSWRFgt better Egt better
partition between E and runoff
RUNOFF
NARR
NLDAS
16
Conclusions
  • Requirement for drought indices They should be
    able to select all major events.
  • For runoff and soil moisture, there are few data
    sets available, we need to use the Global Land
    Data Assimilation System (GLDAS)
  • To have better GLDAS products, we need to have
    better Precipitation, downward solar radiation, E
    .
  • We also need soil moisture measurements to
    validate the GLDAS products.

17
Drought forecasts
  • SM and runoff from lead 1-3 months fcsts
  • A) U Washington ESP VIC nested in the CFS
    monthly fcsts with ESP
  • B) EMC/Princeton Bayesian corrected Precip from
    the CFS monthly mean fcsts to drive VIC
  • C) OHD- SAC model driven by CFS monthly mean
    fcsts to produce streamflow fcsts
  • D) CPC- BCSD corrected SPI and SM fcsts from the
    CFS v2
  • E) NSIPP model soil moisture outputs

18
What do we need?
  • Some thing NOT based on the CFS forecasts.

SE( 26-37N,77-89W)
High resolution forecasts for regional
operations 1, Better Global forecasts 2.Better
high resolution P analyses so we will have better
initial conditions 3.. Better observations for
calibration 4. downscaling 5. Will ensemble
forecasts help? If so, what is the best way to
make ensembles
19
P anom
Dashed line monthly mean anomaly, Solid line-
6-mo running mean
  • P has high frequency (HF) and low frequency (LF)
    component.
  • LF 6 mo running means
  • NCEP P anomalies have large values and
    variances than UW.
  • Before 2001, large differences are in HF bands
  • After 2002, consistent differences in LF band
  • Next LF P? SM changes

20
  • Differences between two systems are larger than
    the spread among members of the same system
  • The differences are not caused by one model. They
    are caused by forcing.
  • In general, extreme values from the UW (Green)
    are larger than from the NCEP (red)

standardized SM anomalies for area
38-42N,110-115W
NCEP(red),UW(green)
21
A dry region
SM has much lower freq. over the western region
22
A wet region
6 mo running mean black line
drought
3 mo running mean (black line)
No smoothing
Red line monthly mean, no smoothing

SM 1-2 months delay
23
Conclusions
  • Reliability The spread among the NLDAS driven by
    the same forcing is small. For NLDAS driven by
    different forcing, differences are larger.
    Different systems are able to capture overall
    drought/floods but the severity is uncertain.
  • Consistency All different indices derived from
    the NLDAS are able to select strong drought
    events.
  • Availability All NLDAS systems are operational
    in near real time.
  • What do we need Better real time reporting of
    precipitation from stations and better
    precipitation analyses

24
Number of reports /month averaged over the box
Large drop in real time
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