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Multimodel Ensembles of Wheat Growth: More Models are Better than One

Authors :
Martre, Pierre
Wallach, Daniel
Asseng, Senthold
Ewert, Frank
Jones, James W
Rotter, Reimund P
Boote, Kenneth J
Ruane, Alex C
Thorburn, Peter J
Cammarano, Davide
Hatfield, Jerry L
Rosenzweig, Cynthia
Aggarwal, Pramod K
Angulo, Carlos
Basso, Bruno
Bertuzzi, Patrick
Biernath, Christian
Brisson, Nadine
Challinor, Andrew J
Doltra, Jordi
Gayler, Sebastian
Goldberg, Richie
Grant, Robert F
Heng, Lee
Hooker, Josh
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2015.

Abstract

Crop models of crop growth are increasingly used to quantify the impact of global changes due to climate or crop management. Therefore, accuracy of simulation results is a major concern. Studies with ensembles of crop models can give valuable information about model accuracy and uncertainty, but such studies are difficult to organize and have only recently begun. We report on the largest ensemble study to date, of 27 wheat models tested in four contrasting locations for their accuracy in simulating multiple crop growth and yield variables. The relative error averaged over models was 24-38% for the different end-of-season variables including grain yield (GY) and grain protein concentration (GPC). There was little relation between error of a model for GY or GPC and error for in-season variables. Thus, most models did not arrive at accurate simulations of GY and GPC by accurately simulating preceding growth dynamics. Ensemble simulations, taking either the mean (e-mean) or median (e-median) of simulated values, gave better estimates than any individual model when all variables were considered. Compared to individual models, e-median ranked first in simulating measured GY and third in GPC. The error of e-mean and e-median declined with an increasing number of ensemble members, with little decrease beyond 10 models. We conclude that multimodel ensembles can be used to create new estimators with improved accuracy and consistency in simulating growth dynamics. We argue that these results are applicable to other crop species, and hypothesize that they apply more generally to ecological system models.

Subjects

Subjects :
Meteorology And Climatology

Details

Language :
English
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Notes :
NNX10AU63A, , WBS 144598.04.01.01.17
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.20150000778
Document Type :
Report