Gridded daily weather data for North America with comprehensive uncertainty quantification

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114 Scopus citations

Abstract

Access to daily high-resolution gridded surface weather data based on direct observations and over long time periods is essential for many studies and applications including vegetation, wildlife, soil health, hydrological modelling, and as driver data in Earth system models. We present Daymet V4, a 40-year daily meteorological dataset on a 1 km grid for North America, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico, providing temperature, precipitation, shortwave radiation, vapor pressure, snow water equivalent, and day length. The dataset includes an objective quantification of uncertainty based on strict cross-validation analysis for temperature and precipitation results. The dataset represents several improvements from a previous version, and this data descriptor provides complete documentation for updated methods. Improvements include: reductions in the timing bias of input reporting weather station measurements; improvement to the three-dimensional regression model techniques in the core algorithm; and a novel approach to handling high elevation temperature measurement biases. We show cross-validation analyses with the underlying weather station data to demonstrate the technical validity of new dataset generation methods, and to quantify improved accuracy.

Original languageEnglish
Article number190
JournalScientific Data
Volume8
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2021

Funding

This research was supported as part of the Energy Exascale Earth System Model (E3SM) project, funded by the US Department of Energy (DOE), Office of Science, Office of Biological and Environmental Research (BER). The extended temporal record of Puerto Rico and surrounding islands was supported by the NGEE Tropics project, funded by the US DOE, BER. Development of previous versions of Daymet as well as its curation and distribution have been supported by funding from NASA through the Earth Science Data and Information System (ESDIS) and the Terrestrial Ecology Program.

FundersFunder number
Earth Science Data and Information System
U.S. Department of Energy
National Aeronautics and Space Administration
Office of Science
Biological and Environmental Research

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