Title
A flexible, integrated system for generating meteorological surfaces derived from point sources across multiple geographic scales
Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Environmental Modelling & Software
Publication Date
7-2005
Volume
20
Issue
7
First Page
873
Last Page
882
Abstract
The generation of meteorological surfaces from point-source data is a difficult but necessary step required for modeling ecological and hydrological processes across landscapes. To date, procedures to acquire, transform, and display meteorological information geographically have been specifically tailored to individual studies. Here we offer a flexible, integrated system that employs a relational database to store point information, a modular system incorporating a choice of weather data interpolation methods, and a matrix inversion method that speeds computer calculations to display information on grids of any specified size, all with minimal user intervention. We demonstrate the power of this integrated approach by cross-validating projected daily meteorological surfaces derived from ∼1200 weather stations distributed across the continental United States for a year. We performed cross-validations for five meteorological variables (solar radiation, minimum and maximum temperatures, humidity, and precipitation) with a truncated Gaussian filter, ordinary kriging and inverse distance weighting and achieved comparable success among all interpolation methods. Cross-validation computation time for ordinary kriging was reduced from 1 h to 3 min when we incorporated the matrix inversion method. We demonstrated the system's flexibility by displaying results at 8-km resolution for the continental USA and at one-degree resolution for the globe.
DOI
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envsoft.2004.05.003
Rights
© 2005 Elsevier
Recommended Citation
William M. Jolly, Jonathan M. Graham, Andrew Michaelis, Ramakrishna Nemani, Steven W. Running, A flexible, integrated system for generating meteorological surfaces derived from point sources across multiple geographic scales, Environmental Modelling & Software, Volume 20, Issue 7, July 2005, Pages 873-882, http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envsoft.2004.05.003.