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Near-term forecasts of NEON lakes reveal gradients of environmental predictability across the U.S.
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  • R. Quinn Thomas,
  • Ryan McClure,
  • Tadhg Moore,
  • Whitney Woelmer,
  • Carl Boettiger,
  • Renato Figueiredo,
  • Robert Hensley,
  • Cayelan Carey
R. Quinn Thomas
Virginia Tech, Virginia Tech

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Ryan McClure
Virginia Tech, Virginia Tech
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Tadhg Moore
Virginia Tech, Virginia Tech
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Whitney Woelmer
Virginia Tech, Virginia Tech
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Carl Boettiger
University of California Berkeley, University of California Berkeley
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Renato Figueiredo
University of Florida, University of Florida
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Robert Hensley
National Ecological Observatory Network, National Ecological Observatory Network
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Cayelan Carey
Virginia Tech, Virginia Tech
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Abstract

The National Ecological Observatory Network (NEON)’s standardized monitoring program provides an unprecedented opportunity for comparing the predictability of ecosystems. To harness the power of NEON data for examining environmental predictability, we scaled a near-term, iterative water temperature forecasting system to all six conterminous NEON lakes. We generated 1 to 35-day ahead forecasts using a process-based hydrodynamic model that was updated with observations as they became available. Forecasts were more accurate than a null model up to 35-days ahead among lakes, with an aggregated 1-day ahead RMSE (root-mean square error) of 0.60℃ and 35-days ahead RMSE of 2.17℃. Water temperature forecast accuracy was positively associated with lake depth and water clarity, and negatively associated with catchment size and fetch. Our results suggest that lake characteristics interact with weather to control the predictability of thermal structure. Our work provides some of the first probabilistic forecasts of NEON sites and a framework for examining continental-scale predictability.