Effects of different regional climate model resolution and forcing scales on projected hydrologic changes

Pablo A. Mendoza, Naoki Mizukami, Kyoko Ikeda, Martyn P. Clark, Ethan D. Gutmann, Jeffrey R. Arnold, Levi D. Brekke, Balaji Rajagopalan

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

36 Scopus citations

Abstract

We examine the effects of regional climate model (RCM) horizontal resolution and forcing scaling (i.e., spatial aggregation of meteorological datasets) on the portrayal of climate change impacts. Specifically, we assess how the above decisions affect: (i) historical simulation of signature measures of hydrologic behavior, and (ii) projected changes in terms of annual water balance and hydrologic signature measures. To this end, we conduct our study in three catchments located in the headwaters of the Colorado River basin. Meteorological forcings for current and a future climate projection are obtained at three spatial resolutions (4-, 12- and 36-km) from dynamical downscaling with the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) regional climate model, and hydrologic changes are computed using four different hydrologic model structures. These projected changes are compared to those obtained from running hydrologic simulations with current and future 4-km WRF climate outputs re-scaled to 12- and 36-km. The results show that the horizontal resolution of WRF simulations heavily affects basin-averaged precipitation amounts, propagating into large differences in simulated signature measures across model structures. The implications of re-scaled forcing datasets on historical performance were primarily observed on simulated runoff seasonality. We also found that the effects of WRF grid resolution on projected changes in mean annual runoff and evapotranspiration may be larger than the effects of hydrologic model choice, which surpasses the effects from re-scaled forcings. Scaling effects on projected variations in hydrologic signature measures were found to be generally smaller than those coming from WRF resolution; however, forcing aggregation in many cases reversed the direction of projected changes in hydrologic behavior.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1003-1019
Number of pages17
JournalJournal of Hydrology
Volume541
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 1 2016

Keywords

  • Climate change
  • Horizontal resolution
  • Hydrologic model structure
  • Regional climate model
  • Spatial aggregation

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