Sea ice interannual variability and sensitivity to fall oceanic
conditions and winter air temperature in the Gulf of St. Lawrence,
Canada.
Abstract
The Gulf of St. Lawrence has been nearly free of sea ice five times in
its
recorded history, three of which have occurred since 2010. This study
examines the inter-annual variability of sea ice cover characteristics
(1969-2023) and winter mixed layer heat content (1996-2023), their
sensitivity to fall oceanic conditions (since fall of 1995) and to
winter
air temperatures. The study finds no relationship between the first
occurrence of sea ice, maximum seasonal volume or winter mixed layer
heat
content and fall oceanic conditions as determined by the heat content
of
the water column in early fall. However, it shows that the first
occurrence
of sea ice in the northwestern Gulf is related to the timing of sea
surface
temperature crossing the 0C threshold with a lag time of about 3
weeks, and with air temperature dropping below -1.8C with a lag of
roughly 40 days. The average air temperature over the Gulf between
December
and February or March is highly correlated to seasonal maximum sea ice
area
and volume, as well as ice season duration. This is likely through a
link
with sensible heat flux. The five nearly ice-free winters correspond to
the
warmest December to February (or December to March) average air
temperatures over the Gulf. From this is inferred that a warming of 2.2
to
2.4C above the 1991-2020 climatology leads to nearly ice-free
conditions in the Gulf of St. Lawrence. This finding is consistent
with
numerical simulation studies.