Abstract

Stochastic daily weather generators are often used to generate long time series of weather variables to drive hydrological and agricultural models. More recently, they have also been used as a downscaling tool for studying the impacts of climate change. This article describes a versatile stochastic weather generator (WeaGETS) for producing daily precipitation, and maximum and minimum temperatures (Tmax and Tmin). WeaGETS regroups several options of other weather generators into one package, such as three Markov models to produce precipitation occurrence, four distributions to generate wet day precipitation amount, and two methods to simulate Tmax and Tmin. More importantly, a spectral correction approach is included in WeaGETS for correcting the underestimation of interannual variability, which is a problem common to all weather generators. The performance of WeaGETS is demonstrated through a comparison against two well-known weather generators (WGEN and CLIGEN) with respect to the generation of precipitation, Tmax, and Tmin for two Canadian meteorological stations. The results show that the widely used first-order Markov model is adequate for producing precipitation occurrence, but it underestimates the longest dry spell for the low-precipitation station. The higher-order models have positive effects. The mixed exponential and skewed normal Pearson III distributions are consistently better than the exponential and gamma distributions at generating precipitation amounts. The two-component mixed exponential distribution is better at representing extreme precipitation events than the other three distributions. WeaGETS is consistently better than WGEN and CLIGEN at producing Tmax and Tmin. Both WGEN and CLIGEN underestimate the monthly and interannual variances of precipitation and temperatures. However, WeaGETS successfully preserves the observed low-frequency variability and autocorrelation functions of precipitation and temperatures. Overall, WeaGETS is consistently better than the other two weather generators (WGEN and CLIGEN) for producing precipitation, Tmax, and Tmin. The Matlab freeware allows for easy modification of all routines, making it easy to add additional weather variables to simulate.

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