@article {Srivastava334, author = {A. Srivastava and D.C. Flanagan and J.R. Frankenberger and B.A. Engel}, title = {Updated climate database and impacts on WEPP model predictions}, volume = {74}, number = {4}, pages = {334--349}, year = {2019}, doi = {10.2489/jswc.74.4.334}, publisher = {Soil and Water Conservation Society}, abstract = {CLImate GENerator (CLIGEN) (v5.3), a stochastic weather generator, is widely used in conjunction with the Water Erosion Prediction Project (WEPP) model for runoff and soil loss predictions. CLIGEN generates daily estimates of weather based on long-term observed weather station data statistics. For the United States, the original CLIGEN database released with WEPP in 1995 was derived using inconsistent periods of climate records through 1992 that could lead to significant variations in runoff and soil loss predictions on spatial and temporal scales. To achieve more reliable estimates of runoff and soil loss, an updated climate database was derived from a consistent 40 years of recent climate records of 1974 to 2013 in the United States. The objectives of this study were to (1) examine the spatial patterns in trends of differences in precipitation and maximum and minimum temperatures between the two databases, and (2) evaluate the impacts on WEPP-predicted mean annual runoff and soil loss, from the original to the updated databases. For runoff and soil loss estimates, WEPP simulations were conducted under a tilled fallow condition for 1,600 CLIGEN locations in the contiguous United States for a slope profile of 22.1 m length, 9\% slope gradient, and silt loam soil.Comparison of precipitation and maximum and minimum temperatures between the original and updated databases showed variations in spatial patterns both annually and seasonally. Annual precipitation and minimum temperature generally increased across most of the country while maximum temperature increased in the western half of the United States and parts of the Northeast. Seasonally, increases in precipitation are evident in the Midwest in spring, fall, and winter, the Northwest in spring, and the Southeast in fall. Maximum daily temperature has increased in the western half of United States and parts of the Northeast in the winter, fall, and spring, whereas minimum daily temperature has increased in all seasons across the United States.Changes in WEPP-simulated mean annual runoff and soil loss from the use of the original to the updated CLIGEN database showed increases in runoff and soil loss in most of the United States. However, some stations showed either increases or decreases in runoff and/or soil loss with the updated database primarily because of differences in monthly precipitation and intensity values in the two databases. Understanding the impacts of the use of the updated database on runoff and soil loss from this study will help in making informed decisions for conservation planning and management when utilizing the WEPP erosion model.}, issn = {0022-4561}, URL = {https://www.jswconline.org/content/74/4/334}, eprint = {https://www.jswconline.org/content/74/4/334.full.pdf}, journal = {Journal of Soil and Water Conservation} }