2018
DOI: 10.1007/s00382-018-4109-3
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On the seasonal prediction of the western United States El Niño precipitation pattern during the 2015/16 winter

Abstract: A "typical" El Niño leads to wet (dry) wintertime anomalies over the southern (northern) half of the Western United States (WUS). However, during the strong El Niño of 2015/16, the WUS winter precipitation pattern was roughly opposite to this canonical (average of the record) anomaly pattern. To understand why this happened, and whether it was predictable, we use a suite of high-resolution seasonal prediction experiments with coupled climate models. We find that the unusual 2015/16 precipitation pattern was pr… Show more

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Cited by 18 publications
(27 citation statements)
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“…Despite these limitations, we find that the approach arrives at convincing evidence for regulated inflow forecast contribution as well as a range of other interesting operator behaviors. While the associated release policies are likely to be highly imperfect models of actual operations, they potentially offer a significant advance on general, theory-driven rules currently adopted in state-of-the-art large-scale, distributed hydrological models (see Yassin et al, 2019, for a state-of-theart review of existing approaches).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Despite these limitations, we find that the approach arrives at convincing evidence for regulated inflow forecast contribution as well as a range of other interesting operator behaviors. While the associated release policies are likely to be highly imperfect models of actual operations, they potentially offer a significant advance on general, theory-driven rules currently adopted in state-of-the-art large-scale, distributed hydrological models (see Yassin et al, 2019, for a state-of-theart review of existing approaches).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A conceptually similar piecewise model is presented in Yassin et al (2019) with the fundamental difference that the process omits forecasts and is therefore based on climatology and current storage and inflow conditions. Importantly, because our algorithm is also computed for individual weeks, it ensures that the effects of operational decisions driven by long-term average water availability conditions are intercepted and removed when estimating the horizon.…”
Section: Derivation Of Horizon Curvesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…FLOR is one of GFDL's present real-time seasonal prediction models and one of the North American Multimodel Ensemble [NMME; Kirtman et al, 2014] Delworth et al, 2006;Gnanadesikan et al, 2006;Wittenberg et al, 2006], with a horizontal resolution of about 100 km and 50 vertical layers. FLOR shows skill in seasonal prediction of different variables in the tropics and extratropics (Vecchi et al 2014;Jia et al, 2015;Kapnick et al, 2018;Yang et al, 2015;Yang et al, 2018).…”
Section: Prediction Based On Flor Ensemble Output and A Regression Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%