Atmospheric and Climate Sciences

Volume 10, Issue 1 (January 2020)

ISSN Print: 2160-0414   ISSN Online: 2160-0422

Google-based Impact Factor: 0.68  Citations  h5-index & Ranking

Evaluation of Daily Gridded Meteorological Datasets over the Niger Delta Region of Nigeria and Implication to Water Resources Management

HTML  XML Download Download as PDF (Size: 3233KB)  PP. 21-39  
DOI: 10.4236/acs.2020.101002    827 Downloads   2,471 Views  Citations

ABSTRACT

Hydro-climatological study is difficult in most of the developing countries due to the paucity of monitoring stations. Gridded climatological data provides an opportunity to extrapolate climate to areas without monitoring stations based on their ability to replicate the Spatio-temporal distribution and variability of observed datasets. Simple correlation and error analyses are not enough to predict the variability and distribution of precipitation and temperature. In this study, the coefficient of correlation (R2), Root mean square error (RMSE), mean bias error (MBE) and mean wet and dry spell lengths were used to evaluate the performance of three widely used daily gridded precipitation, maximum and minimum temperature datasets from the Climatic Research Unit (CRU), Princeton University Global Meteorological Forcing (PGF) and Climate Forecast System Reanalysis (CFSR) datasets available over the Niger Delta part of Nigeria. The Standardised Precipitation Index was used to assess the confidence of using gridded precipitation products on water resource management. Results of correlation, error, and spell length analysis revealed that the CRU and PGF datasets performed much better than the CFSR datasets. SPI values also indicate a good association between station and CRU precipitation products. The CFSR datasets in comparison with the other data products in many years overestimated and underestimated the SPI. This indicates weak accuracy in predictability, hence not reliable for water resource management in the study area. However, CRU data products were found to perform much better in most of the statistical assessments conducted. This makes the methods used in this study to be useful for the assessment of various gridded datasets in various hydrological and climatic applications.

Share and Cite:

Hassan, I. , Kalin, R. , White, C. and Aladejana, J. (2020) Evaluation of Daily Gridded Meteorological Datasets over the Niger Delta Region of Nigeria and Implication to Water Resources Management. Atmospheric and Climate Sciences, 10, 21-39. doi: 10.4236/acs.2020.101002.

Cited by

[1] Changes in extreme precipitation over Mpologoma catchment in Uganda, East Africa
Heliyon, 2023
[2] Selection of the Most Suitable Gridded Precipitation and Temperature Datasets for the Kabul River Basin based on Statistical Indices-A Transboundary Basin between …
Journal of Himalayan Earth …, 2022
[3] Komparasi Dataset Suhu Udara Berbasis Penginderaan Jauh Dalam Mengestimasi Suhu Udara Bulanan di Provinsi Papua Barat
Rona Teknik Pertanian, 2022
[4] Reliability and economic assessment of rainwater harvesting systems for dairy production
Resources, Conservation & …, 2022
[5] Testing the mHM-MPR Reliability for Parameter Transferability across Locations in North–Central Nigeria
Hydrology, 2022
[6] Environmental implications of petroleum spillages in the Niger Delta region of Nigeria: A review
2021
[7] A new method for assessing satellite-based hydrological data products using water budget closure
2021
[8] Multi-criteria performance evaluation of gridded precipitation and temperature products in data-sparse regions
Atmosphere, 2021
[9] The impacts of current climate variability on coffee production in the northern and southern highlands of Tanzania
2021
[10] Selection of CMIP5 GCM ensemble for the projection of spatio-temporal changes in precipitation and temperature over the Niger Delta, Nigeria
2020
[11] Performance Evaluation of Satellite-Based Rainfall Products over Nigeria
2020
[12] Trend characteristics of rainy days and evaporation at a tropical rainforest region in East Malaysia, Borneo
2020
[13] Potential impacts of climate change on extreme weather events in the Niger Delta part of Nigeria
2020

Copyright © 2024 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.

Creative Commons License

This work and the related PDF file are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.