4.5 Article

Evaluation of global climate model on performances of precipitation simulation and prediction in the Huaihe River basin

Journal

THEORETICAL AND APPLIED CLIMATOLOGY
Volume 133, Issue 1-2, Pages 191-204

Publisher

SPRINGER WIEN
DOI: 10.1007/s00704-017-2185-7

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51579068/51609062]
  2. Special Fund for Public Welfare Industry of the Ministry of Water Resources of China [201501007]
  3. National Key Technologies R&D Program of China [2016YFC0400909]

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Using climate models with high performance to predict the future climate changes can increase the reliability of results. In this paper, six kinds of global climate models that selected from the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5 (CMIP5) under Representative Concentration Path (RCP) 4.5 scenarios were compared to the measured data during baseline period (1960-2000) and evaluate the simulation performance on precipitation. Since the results of single climate models are often biased and highly uncertain, we examine the back propagation (BP) neural network and arithmetic mean method in assembling the precipitation of multi models. The delta method was used to calibrate the result of single model and multimodel ensembles by arithmetic mean method (MME-AM) during the validation period (2001-2010) and the predicting period (2011-2100). We then use the single models and multimodel ensembles to predict the future precipitation process and spatial distribution. The result shows that BNU-ESM model has the highest simulation effect among all the single models. The multimodel assembled by BP neural network (MME-BP) has a good simulation performance on the annual average precipitation process and the deterministic coefficient during the validation period is 0.814. The simulation capability on spatial distribution of precipitation is: calibrated MME-AM > MME-BP > calibrated BNU-ESM. The future precipitation predicted by all models tends to increase as the time period increases. The order of average increase amplitude of each season is: winter > spring > summer > autumn. These findings can provide useful information for decision makers to make climate-related disaster mitigation plans.

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