Icings as sentinels and modifiers of water flow through winter landscapes: An exploration of physico‐chemical processes on the lake‐dominated, discontinuous permafrost Taiga Shield

Abstract The winter hydrological period is in transition across the Canadian subarctic, as climate warming is shifting precipitation regimes, thawing permafrost, and altering active layer dynamics, and thus increasing the overall amount, and variability, of winter streamflow. Effects of these change...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Hydrological Processes
Main Authors: Alsafi, Nora E., Palmer, Mike J., Kokelj, Steven V., Ensom, Timothy P., Spence, Christopher, Tank, Suzanne E.
Other Authors: Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, Polar Knowledge Canada
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2024
Subjects:
Ice
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hyp.15251
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/hyp.15251
Description
Summary:Abstract The winter hydrological period is in transition across the Canadian subarctic, as climate warming is shifting precipitation regimes, thawing permafrost, and altering active layer dynamics, and thus increasing the overall amount, and variability, of winter streamflow. Effects of these changes are poorly understood on the Taiga Shield, which comprises ~20% of North America's permafrost‐covered area, and is characterized by a unique ‘fill‐and‐spill’ hydrology whereby runoff generation requires the exceedance of lake basin storage thresholds. Here, we assessed lake hydrostatic levels and used trail camera images of icings, which are sheet‐like masses of layered ice that are common manifestations of wintertime flow on the Taiga Shield, to understand landscape controls on winter water movement in this region. We further used paired geochemical measurements to explore how source water characteristics affect icing chemistry, and the degree to which icings may modify the chemical composition of active winter flow. We undertake this work over 2 years, and across watersheds of different sizes and lake basin characteristics. We show that icing growth is driven by hydroclimatic controls that include fill‐and‐spill hydrologic constraints and winter air temperatures, and that pre‐freshet pulses of water flow are common within this landscape. Across winters with variable antecedent precipitation levels, a larger catchment was able to support icing growth via continued runoff generation, while small catchments were not. Icings were often chemically dilute compared with source waters, indicating that solute exclusion may actively enrich geochemical concentrations in flowing water. Across icings, chemical variation appeared related to source water type (groundwater versus lake; lake size) and apparent redox conditions. These results highlight that streamwater hydrology and biogeochemistry can be dynamic during the understudied winter period, and illustrate that icings may alter the composition of wintertime flow as it ...