C41F-03
Developing Snow Model Forcing Data From WRF Model Output to Aid in Water Resource Forecasting

Thursday, 17 December 2015: 08:30
3005 (Moscone West)
Scott Havens1, Danny G Marks1, Katelyn A Watson2, Matt Masarik2, Alejandro N Flores2, Patrick Kormos1 and Andrew R Hedrick3, (1)USDA Agriculture Research Serv, Boise, ID, United States, (2)Boise State University, Boise, ID, United States, (3)USDA Agricultural Research Service New England Plant, Soil and Water Research Laboratory, East Wareham, MA, United States
Abstract:
Traditional operational modeling tools used by water managers in the west are challenged by more frequently occurring uncharacteristic stream flow patterns caused by climate change. Water managers are now turning to new models based on the physical processes within a watershed to combat the increasing number of events that do not follow the historical patterns. The USDA-ARS has provided near real time snow water equivalent (SWE) maps using iSnobal since WY2012 for the Boise River Basin in southwest Idaho and since WY2013 for the Tuolumne Basin in California that feeds the Hetch Hetchy reservoir. The goal of these projects is to not only provide current snowpack estimates but to use the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model to drive iSnobal in order to produce a forecasted stream flow when coupled to a hydrology model.

The first step is to develop methods on how to create snow model forcing data from WRF outputs. Using a reanalysis 1km WRF dataset from WY2009 over the Boise River Basin, WRF model results like surface air temperature, relative humidity, wind, precipitation, cloud cover, and incoming long wave radiation must be downscaled for use in iSnobal. iSnobal results forced with WRF output are validated at point locations throughout the basin, as well as compared with iSnobal results forced with traditional weather station data. The presentation will explore the differences in forcing data derived from WRF outputs and weather stations and how this affects the snowpack distribution.