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  3. Impacts of Adjusting Solid Precipitation Amounts in the Canadian Precipitation Analysis System
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Impacts of Adjusting Solid Precipitation Amounts in the Canadian Precipitation Analysis System

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Type de ressource
Article de revue
Auteurs/contributeurs
  • Aubry, Catherine (Auteur)
  • Bélair, Stéphane (Auteur)
  • Thériault, Julie M. (Auteur)
  • Mekis, Eva (Auteur)
  • Feng, Pei-Ning (Auteur)
  • Lespinas, Franck (Auteur)
  • Khedhaouiria, Dikra (Auteur)
  • Beaudry, Florence (Auteur)
Titre
Impacts of Adjusting Solid Precipitation Amounts in the Canadian Precipitation Analysis System
Résumé
Abstract Real-time precipitation data are essential for weather forecasting, flood prediction, drought monitoring, irrigation, fire prevention, and hydroelectric management. To optimize these activities, reliable precipitation estimates are crucial. Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) leads the Canadian Precipitation Analysis (CaPA) project, providing near-real-time precipitation estimates across North America. However, during winter, CaPA’s 6-hourly accuracy is limited because many automatic surface observations are not assimilated due to wind-induced gauge undercatch. The objective of this study is to evaluate the added value of adjusted hourly precipitation amounts for gauge undercatch due to wind speed in CaPA. A recent ECCC dataset of hourly precipitation measurements from automatic precipitation gauges across Canada is included in CaPA as part of this study. Precipitation amounts are adjusted based on several types of transfer functions, which convert measured precipitation into what high-quality equipment would have measured with reduced undercatch. First, there are no notable differences in CaPA when comparing the performance of the universal transfer function with that of several climate-specific transfer functions based on wind speed and air temperature. However, increasing solid precipitation amounts using a specific type of transfer function that depends on snowfall intensity rather than near-surface air temperature is more likely to improve CaPA’s precipitation estimates during the winter season. This improvement is more evident when the objective evaluation is performed with direct comparison with the Adjusted Daily Rainfall and Snowfall (AdjDlyRS) dataset.
Publication
Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology
Volume
64
Numéro
7
Pages
745-760
Date
07/2025
DOI
10.1175/JAMC-D-24-0083.1
ISSN
1558-8424, 1558-8432
URL
https://journals.ametsoc.org/view/journals/apme/64/7/JAMC-D-24-0083.1.xml
Consulté le
2025-08-10 22 h 19
Catalogue de bibl.
DOI.org (Crossref)
Autorisations
http://www.ametsoc.org/PUBSReuseLicenses
Référence
Aubry, C., Bélair, S., Thériault, J. M., Mekis, E., Feng, P.-N., Lespinas, F., Khedhaouiria, D., & Beaudry, F. (2025). Impacts of Adjusting Solid Precipitation Amounts in the Canadian Precipitation Analysis System. Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology, 64(7), 745–760. https://doi.org/10.1175/JAMC-D-24-0083.1
Axes du RIISQ
  • 2 - enjeux de gestion et de gouvernance
Enjeux majeurs
  • Prévision, projection et modélisation
Lieux
  • Canada
Secteurs et disciplines
  • Nature et Technologie
  • Santé
Types d'événements extrêmes
  • Évènements liés au froid (neige, glace)
  • Feux de forêts
  • Inondations et crues
  • Sécheresses et canicules
Types d'inondations
  • Par embâcle
Lien vers cette notice
https://bibliographies.uqam.ca/riisq/bibliographie/9P48WNUZ

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