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Contribution of land surface initialization to subseasonal forecast skill: First results from a multi-model experiment

Authors :
T. J. Yamada
M. Boisserie
Randal D. Koster
Lifeng Luo
Gianpaolo Balsamo
David M. Lawrence
Francisco J. Doblas-Reyes
Sarith Mahanama
Frederic Vitart
Sonia I. Seneviratne
G.B Drewitt
Eric F. Wood
Z. Guo
Z. Li
B. J. J. M. van den Hurk
Jee-Hoon Jeong
C. T. Gordon
W.-S. Lee
Tanja Stanelle
Paul A. Dirmeyer
Sergey Malyshev
Aaron A. Berg
William J. Merryfield
Source :
Geophysical Research Letters. 37
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
American Geophysical Union (AGU), 2010.

Abstract

[1] The second phase of the Global Land-Atmosphere Coupling Experiment (GLACE-2) is aimed at quantifying, with a suite of long-range forecast systems, the degree to which realistic land surface initialization contributes to the skill of subseasonal precipitation and air temperature forecasts. Results, which focus here on North America, show significant contributions to temperature prediction skill out to two months across large portions of the continent. For precipitation forecasts, contributions to skill are much weaker but are still significant out to 45 days in some locations. Skill levels increase markedly when calculations are conditioned on the magnitude of the initial soil moisture anomaly.

Details

ISSN :
00948276
Volume :
37
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Geophysical Research Letters
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........47dfe72c21b56d20c5ac984f33d65722