Los puntos clave no están disponibles para este artículo en este momento.
The GRACE-derived terrestrial water storage (TWSGRACE) provides measurements of the mass exchange and transport between continents, oceans, and ice sheets. In this study, a statistical approach was used to forecast TWSGRACE data using 10 major African watersheds as test sites. The forecasted TWSGRACE was then used to predict drought events in the examined African watersheds. Using a nonlinear autoregressive with exogenous input (NARX) model, relationships were derived between TWSGRACE data and the controlling and/or related variables (rainfall, temperature, evapotranspiration, and Normalized Difference Vegetation Index). The performance of the model was found to be “very good” (Nash–Sutcliffe (NSE) > 0.75; scaled root mean square error (R*) 0.65; R* 0.50; R* < 0.7) for the remaining 30% of the watersheds. During the forecasted period, no drought events were predicted over the Niger basin, the termination of the latest (March–October 2015) drought event was observed over the Zambezi basin, and the onset of a drought event (January-March 2016) over the Lake Chad basin was correctly predicted. Adopted methodologies generate continuous and uninterrupted TWSGRACE records, provide predictive tools to address environmental and hydrological problems, and help bridge the current gap between GRACE missions.
Ahmed et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: