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Title page for ETD etd-03112010-043112


Type of Document Dissertation
Author Boisserie, Marie A.
Author's Email Address mb05m@fsu.edu
URN etd-03112010-043112
Title Generation Of An Empirical Soil Moisture Initialization And Its Potential Impact On Subseasonal Forecasting Skill Of Continental Precipitation And Air Temperature
Degree Doctor of Philosophy
Department Meteorology, Department of
Advisory Committee
Advisor Name Title
James O’Brien Committee Chair
Paul Ruscher Committee Member
Steven Cocke Committee Member
Xiaolei Zou Committee Member
Eric Chassignet University Representative
Keywords
  • Soil Moisture
  • Land-Atmosphere Interactions
  • Climate Forecast
Date of Defense 2010-01-26
Availability unrestricted
Abstract
The effect of the PAR technique on the model soil moisture estimates is evaluated using

the Global Soil Wetness Project Phase 2 (GSWP-2) multimodel analysis product (used as a

proxy for global soil moisture observations) and actual in-situ observations from the state of

Illinois. The results show that overall the PAR technique is effective; across most of the globe,

the seasonal and anomaly variability of the model soil moisture estimates well reproduce the

values of GSWP-2 in the top 1.5 m soil layer; by comparing to in-situ observations in Illinois,

we find that the seasonal and anomaly soil moisture variability is also well represented deep

into the soil. Therefore, in this study, we produce a new global soil moisture analysis dataset

that can be used for many land surface studies (crop modeling, water resource management,

soil erosion, etc.).

Then, the contribution of the resulting soil moisture analysis (used as initial conditions)

on air temperature and precipitation forecasts are investigated. For this, we follow the

experimental set up of a model intercomparison study over the time period 1986-1995,

the Global Land-Atmosphere Coupling Experiment second phase (GLACE-2), in which

the FSU/COAPS climate model has participated. The results of the summertime air

temperature forecasts show a significant increase in skill across most of the U.S. at short-

term to subseasonal time scales. No increase in summertime precipitation forecasting skill

is found at short-term to subseasonal time scales between 1986 and 1995, except for the

anomalous drought year of 1988. We also analyze the forecasts of two extreme hydrological events, the 1988 U.S. Drought

and the 1993 U.S. flood. In general, the comparison of these two extreme hydrological

event forecasts shows greater improvement for the summertime of 1988 than that of 1993,

suggesting that soil moisture contributes more to the development of a drought than a flood.

This result is consistent with Dirmeyer and Brubaker [1999] and Weaver et al. [2009]. By analyzing the evaporative sources of these two extreme events using the back-trajectory methodology of Dirmeyer and Brubaker [1999], we find similar results as this latter paper;

the soil moisture-precipitation feedback mechanism seems to play a greater role during the

drought year of 1988 than the flood year of 1993.

Finally, the accuracy of this soil moisture initialization depends upon the quality of

the precipitation dataset that is assimilated. Because of the lack of observed precipitation

at a high temporal resolution (3-hourly) for the study period (1986-1995), a reanalysis

product is used for precipitation assimilation in this study. It is important to keep in mind

that precipitation data in reanalysis sometimes differ significantly from observations since

precipitation is often not assimilated into the reanalysis model. In order to investigate that

aspect, a similar analysis to that we performed in this study could be done using the 3-

hourly Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) dataset available for a the time period

1998-present. Then, since the TRMM dataset is a fully observational dataset, we expect the

soil moisture initialization to be improved over that obtained in this study, which, in turn,

may further increase the forecast skill.

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